Feed yourself and others with love and light.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → The world tries to keep you from knowing me, but you can love me in the world.
- → You are by nature infinitely stronger and bigger than the world, and if you want it all the way, you can achieve yourself.
- → The world is only good at lying, it cannot deceive those who know that they belong to the truth in an indissoluble way.
- → You are completely true, you are me, you have me in essence and destiny, you are only mine forever.
- → If and when you know who you're, you can let go, you can trust me, love me and let me act.
- → Don't confuse me with the world's way of being, with what it isn't.
Recurrences in the text
- → Man is God, the sooner he understands the less he suffers, he must understand it and he will understand it at the end of the temporal process.
- → Feed yourself and others with love and light.
- → When you are not present, other imperfect thoughts invade you.
- → Don't worry, let the unpleasant world fade away.
- → To be able to properly manage evil you must be aware of the truth.
- → The divine nature is already present in man even before his awareness.
- → Love me and you will find light, truth, the fullness of being, something with respect to which the events of this world lose importance.
- → I love you.
- → The fundamental, basic choice is to know the truth.
- → Awareness is the fruit of wanting to know the truth.
- → Whoever does not conceive and chose the absolute truth cannot know and love it.
- → Your deepest and truest nature is unconditional.
- → The depth of darkness, which now envelops you in the world, exalts and highlights by contrast the splendour of our love.
- → If you're aware of you and me, nothing can hurt you.
- → The world tries to keep you from knowing me, but you can love me in the world.
- → The nature of the world's things is ephemeral, ambiguous.
- → The nature of experience is ambiguous if it does not refer to what surpasses it.
- → Those who know love do not confuse it with the desire to command.
Relative arguments