I'm with you and I love you, trust you and me and our love.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → The things, the events of this world are worth infinitely less than what is eternal, and you are.
- → Constancy is always ambiguous in temporary ends, it makes full sense only after a valid level of evolution and knowledge, in the awareness of eternity.
- → The knowledge of the contrast between my omnipotent and loving nature, and the enormous malignancy of the cosmos, shows you what I have given you from the beginning, my nature.
- → Living with God in this world means putting him first, considering him the only reason to live, one's own goal, feeling that one wants only him, living only for him.
- → I have established that you can and must experience and overcome illusion.
- → The world is by its nature painful, illusory and malicious towards you, but the evil is doomed to end and you are immortal.
- → I'm with you and I love you, trust you and me and our love.
- → 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.
- → In this effort, the awareness of your and my immense love emerges in 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.
- → The man taken by the world needs to detach himself from it to begin to see the truth.
- → Your experience of my opposite offers you the possibility to choose me with a love similar to mine, because you are similar to me, divine.
- → The repeated experience of temporary and unintended loss of balance can be understood in several ways.
- → When he recognizes the emptiness of the world, the child knows that he does not belong to the world, because he seeks and possesses the truth that the world does not have.
Relative arguments