I can love you everywhere, but love is uncertain in bodies, in sensations, in what is temporary, it is certain in what is eternal.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → My love has no end.
- → Enjoy my company and the fullness of a life lived in me.
- → Keep your certainty.
- → You will certainly find me.
- → Don't forget.
- → Come on, do not be afraid.
- → Destroy the illusion of the world, defeat the nothingness of evil, because it does not exist, it is not, it is not eternal and it is not me.
- → The certainty that you find in me contrasts with the uncertainty that the world has by nature and gives you.
- → Whoever recognizes the difference between God and the world knows well who he is and to whom he belongs.
- → Recognizing the absurdity of denying or neglecting the existence of truth implies absolute truth.
- → If you have a certainty, you know you belong to it.
- → If you're sure the world is uncertain, you know you don't belong to it.
- → The opposites of negative self-referential phrases are true in an absolute, unconditional way.
- → Be certain that an eternally true reality exists and belongs to you.
- → To believe it is necessary to believe that there is truth, a reality that is always true, eternal.
- → I love you and I want you, as you already know, and I will undoubtedly have you.
- → I can love you everywhere, but love is uncertain in bodies, in sensations, in what is temporary, it is certain in what is eternal.
- → Certain love is eternal and there I am fully.
Relative arguments