You climb into useless vanity, you withdraw from my love, from the love that you possess and don't give.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → I, Lord God, look at you with tenderness, I join you in your torments, in your choices, at every moment, always, I never break from you, I never break the love for you, I know your disappointments, as you live in this world that does not love you and does not belong to you.
Recurrences in the text
- → You climb into useless vanity, you withdraw from my love, from the love that you possess and don't give.
- → My lips are infinite sweetness.
- → Everything is vain.
- → Everything goes.
- → What surrounds you is nothing.
- → My everything is not vain.
- → I, the Lord God, am pure happiness and I will draw everyone to me with my love.
- → Love is a descent, a bond, the complete realization of being father's children, of a father who loves and nothing else.
- → When love, which is me, is attained at this level, knowledge of me reveals itself in its fullness and awareness.
- → Appropriating the belonging to be really children is to achieve the harmony that leads to God, to the father.
- → Because my children are made to love and be loved, they will understand greater things, the knowledge of themselves and me.
- → I, Lord God, look at you with tenderness, I join you in your torments, in your choices, at every moment, always, I never break from you, I never break the love for you, I know your disappointments, as you live in this world that does not love you and does not belong to you.
- → I have already chosen you in the preciousness of love.
- → Day after day my children live bombarded by situations they don't want and find themselves living.
- → When I see my tormented children, I understand their difficulties, that there is light but they do not see it, that I am there, but they prefer to me what belongs to the world and to the flesh.
- → You are not empty creatures or empty children.
- → You are full of intelligence, love and light.
Relative arguments