The world is a fictitious building, based on selfishness, that breaks down, crushes and weakens my children, identity, love and thoughts.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → The world is a fictitious building, based on selfishness, that breaks down, crushes and weakens my children, identity, love and thoughts.
- → Among my children, someone knows me, many do not know me yet, they wander in search of something which can take their thoughts, they love nonexistent platforms, vain, useless things of the world, they turn and turn around to empty thoughts to fill up these thoughts.
- → I don't want the children to let themselves be taken by the snares of the world, of the flesh, by the flattery of that world that drags them and pushes them not to seek me, not to possess me, not to feel loved.
- → I desire children in the light, of the light, not tormented, who do not drag the world behind them, who think me and who love me.
- → What is relative, the world is temporary, deceptive, intentionally false, it must be understood for what it is, it must not be loved, desired, overestimated, it must be let go, it must be seen as non-existent, illusory and not feared.
- → The world is the negative pole of choice and has the task of deceiving man and making him suffer until man decides to love God fully.
- → All the game in the world, all the power of illusion tries to influence what you believe, your way of knowing, but it can not change your nature.
- → This pain, this illusion has no sense or outlet in itself, it is functional to your awakening, to ignite your intelligence and your love for the truth.
- → The experience of the world is an illusion, it conditions you continuously, with an enormous amount of false information since your childhood, since you could not recognize it.
- → The world is by nature fragile, temporary, constantly trying to delude and disappoint you, to convince you that you have its nature, that you are fragile, temporary, and you belong to it.
Relative arguments