I love you, I love your good, which is me.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → Understanding the non-worth of the world, you know of being eternal, divine.
- → But if you value the world as non-null, that is, you give it a value of truth, then evaluate yourself as finite, similar to the world, temporary.
- → If you believe the world important to God, you consider God similar to the world, limited, finite, relative, and you do not know God.
- → 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.
- → You do not belong to this world, you belong to eternity, you are mine and immortal.
- → 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.
Recurrences in the text
- → I love you, I love your good, which is me.
- → People are real, they are immortal in nature.
- → But if you value the world as non-null, that is, you give it a value of truth, then evaluate yourself as finite, similar to the world, temporary.
- → No difficulty is comparable to eternal life.
- → My sons, the time of your realization is near.
- → Do not be afraid, you are mine and you will not be lost.
- → The world will end, it never existed fully.
- → You have immortal nature.
- → The full understanding of the emptiness of temporary nature requires belonging to the immortal nature.
- → The world is by its nature painful, illusory and malicious towards you, but the evil is doomed to end and you are immortal.
- → You do not belong to this world, you belong to eternity, you are mine and immortal.
- → Love intensely, deeply, with everything, for free, without expecting reward, without receiving anything in return.
- → Train for eternity, in love.
- → Welcome to love, to eternity.
Relative arguments