Only those who love can see the game of love in the events of the world.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → If he refuses what he is, man loses himself, he cedes beeing to things, to nothingness, and suffers.
- → In rejecting love, you lose your realization, you suffer and you make others suffer.
- → Every man can and must realize eternity, because he possesses it by nature and can not lose it.
- → If you fear or crave the world, you can not observe it, you lose sight of the truth, you and me, you can not love me.
- → The world is empty, uncertain, unreal, it's not your homeland, it has only a brief deceptive experience in common with you.
- → The world imposes considerable limits and illusions on you, which you must experience and which one day will appear to you for what they are, little, nothing, a game compared to what I give you.
- → This world proclaims and makes us experience the temporariness and precariousness of everything, in the false perspective of the final victory of pure nothingness, of total annihilation.
- → You are loved children, but do not understand it, keep flattering from what surrounds you, abound in love and have a huge amount of love, but you give it in exchange for what does not belong to you.
- → Dear sons, seek love, goodness, peace and you will find me, flourish, do not let yourselves wither, shine, do not let yourselves be obscured, love continually, live for me, because I live for you, and do not let yourselves be struck by the iniquity of the world, which leads into darkness.
- → Now the son must show himself strong in love, in light and in harmony, because he is the son of a strong father, he must discover his numerous quality, he must leave what makes him suffering, unsure, confused, causes pain and illness.
- → I wish above all that you do not care about things, do not let be worried of the things of the world and the flesh, but that you care, put attention, orient yourself and look to the kingdom of God and only to me.
Relative arguments