I love you as you are, I accept how you love me now, your way of looking for me, and I take into account your difficulties.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → I'm your father and I take care of you, son.
- → When you're sad, son, think of me, father, and you'll rejoice, the sadness will disappear.
- → When you can't love, son, look at me, the father, as I love, and you will love.
- → When you are assailed by any doubt, son, embrace me, the father, and any doubt will disappear with my warmth of father.
Recurrences in the text
- → Man can and must understand and choose, but this does not exclude the experience of pain.
- → This world offers man the possibility of making the opposite choice to God, of denying, rejecting God and experiencing its consequences.
- → I love you as you are, I accept how you love me now, your way of looking for me, and I take into account your difficulties.
- → Being with me is your life.
- → The sense of the limits of this world is in understanding the difference between the eternal and the temporary, in learning to face the difficulties of the moment in view of the infinite good.
- → Accept difficulties with generosity, courage and love, based on eternal truth.
- → The inevitable difficulties of the path actively seek to hinder it.
- → In itself, every event in the world is meaningless and worthless.
- → Our love is invincible, eternal like you and me.
- → This temporary world has an opposite nature to mine, it's my opposite.
- → The need for infinite love that I have placed in you does not find a valid correspondence in the world.
- → When you see what the world is like for me, you'll have a good laugh.
- → When you are assailed by any doubt, son, embrace me, the father, and any doubt will disappear with my warmth of father.
- → The trial that now touches the world is for the benefit of all of you, my children, it shows you the ephemeral nature of things in the world and draws your attention to me, your eternal need for love and certainty.
Relative arguments