You will come to me naturally, when you realize who you have always been.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → What belongs to death is temporary in nature.
- → Let go the illusion of the world, of the body and of nothingness out of your mind.
- → Observe the always present truth, by nature still and eternal, even in illusion.
- → God is both being in his immutable nature and becoming in the realization of his project.
- → You will come to me naturally, when you realize who you have always been.
- → Your destiny, your nature is the truth, and I am it.
- → 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.
- → The material world is by nature fragmentary, hostile to knowledge.
- → Your nature is your destiny, nothing dark belongs to you.
- → The world is an instrument, a means that does not know and does not have its own end.
- → What belongs to the world has the nature of the world, it finds meaning only in being used in view of what surpasses it.
- → Man does not have the nature of the world; in being used for other purposes he undergoes a forcing.
- → The end of man belongs to him, it is his very nature and it surpasses this world.
- → Eternity is your true nature, your destiny, it is not a dream or a myth.
- → The very physicality of your body collaborates with the deception of the world, and it is not easy for man to understand who he is and to whom he belongs.
Relative arguments