Every choice has the same nature as its object, it loves its object, unites and adapts to it.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → Please remember me, don't let the world take you, for your own good.
- → Ignorance, pain, selfishness and death are not for you, they are not compatible with your true nature.
- → Love is a total, full choice.
- → Every choice has the same nature as its object, it loves its object, unites and adapts to it.
- → The ambiguity of the world destroys what belongs to it and highlights the futility of choosing it.
- → The announcement, the revelation, the need to know and love tell man to direct his choice towards me.
- → Once the level of spiritual pain has been overcome, the path is resolved in an inner simplification.
- → If you want you can oppose the world and return to the truth, and in this act you find yourself and a deep understanding for others.
- → Men differ temporarily in what they know, they do not differ in who they are.
- → If everything were temporary, silence would be too, therefore absolute silence is absurd, contradictory, unthinkable, impracticable.
- → Confidently remember me, our relationship, who we are, our unbridgeable difference from the world, how the world works to obscure your knowledge and unbalance you.
- → Your being, what you are, is not defined or influenced by the world, by events.
- → Your dignity, your nature is divine, it does not change.
- → A mind focused on internal goals of the world is a slave to the world and chains to the world.
- → Strengthening the mind with concentration without adjusting its goals leads to more pain, but opens up the possibility of a later turn towards higher goals.
- → What you now live in the perishable dimension, subjected to temporariness, is a brief and intense negative experience, which invites you to recognize and desire the gift for which I have destined you.
- → A commitment sufficient in duration and intensity can recognize one's need for certainty and truth.
Relative arguments