A spirituality without love speaks of obedience, detachment, renunciation, can count as a failed experience or a moment of fortification, if it is prolonged it strengthens, obscures, annihilates man, is the worst illusion and allows heavy manipulations.
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 .→ 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.
→ I love you, don 't get away from me, don 't neglect me.→ Without me, you lose yourself , the world drags you into its illusion , it robs you of the truth , of your eternal identity .→ I always love you, but when you're unconscious you forget and lose yourself and me.→ If you take your attention away from me, you remain my son , but you forget it and suffer the illusions of the world .→ If I am lovingly present in your consciousness , you know who you are and the world is not a problem for you.
→ If you cannot love me as much as you would like because of the illusion of the world , trusting my love for you and confronting the force of the illusion you have to face , you can understand your nature .→ The cosmic illusion continually attacks you through all that of it to which you attach yourself , beginning with the body , yet this illusion , however great it may be , can do nothing to you.→ The illusion , the thought that moves away from the truth , tries to feed itself , by nature it cannot exist , it tends to annihilate itself , to fail its purpose .→ My son , signal , show your brothers the contradictory and illusory nature of the world , so that they can understand that they belong to the eternal truth .
Relative arguments