I have chosen you with the fullness of love, to be with you in eternity.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → I have chosen you with the fullness of love, to be with you in eternity.
- → The temporary aspects of history, the events, count for little or nothing compared to the full realization of the eternal project.
- → My love for each one of you is immense.
- → Be content that we love each other and belong to each other.
- → If you understand what I give you, you'll find out who I am, who you are and how much we are worth to each other.
- → Self-confidence is necessary for the journey, but it must be ready to detach itself from any temporary form.
- → The truth that belongs to you and competes to you is beyond the world.
- → This world is an illusion that cannot satisfy you as much as you want, only in the eternal dimension can you find who you are.
- → The incredible darkness of the world hides the truth from you, it makes you love its emptiness and neglect what you exist for.
- → Your nature is your destiny, nothing dark belongs to 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.
- → Recognizing with certainty the ambiguous nature of the world highlights the existence of a dimension that transcends it and the belonging to it of those who know it.
- → Then you can see who you are, how close you are to me and we belong together.
- → Don't give all your attention to what is worth much less than your immortal nature, your divine essence.
- → I am not far from you, look for me inside you, in the depths.
- → Reflection, intelligence can and must see, recognize and overcome the nature of the cosmos, changing, continuously discontinuous, certainly uncertain, contradictory, tending to annihilate itself, and find in a sure and indissoluble way the immortal nature and its own unity with it.
Relative arguments