I call you in every way, with joys, sorrows and all sorts of events.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → Temporaneity, fragility, a way of being destined not to be, expresses the contradiction, the ambiguity of the world and of what belongs to it.
- → To understand what I give you is a great good for you.
- → I call you in every way, with joys, sorrows and all sorts of events.
- → Those who know me love me, don't fear me.
- → The world is empty, uncertain, unreal, it's not your homeland, it has only a brief deceptive experience in common with you.
- → When you practice conscious contact with me, you can see the enormous force that tries to distract you and subdue you.
- → The awakening of man in the world requires will, love, balance, an intelligent and confident energy.
- → I am always with you, and knowing this is a great good for you, but this continuity is not bound by what you experience.
- → I am much closer and more intimate to you than your sensations, which are signs, of your body, a shell, of much of what you thought you were, that is, an external construction mediated with the world.
- → In the inevitable and unpleasant experience of uncertainty, of temporariness, of contradiction, you can conceive a state of greater fullness as a lack or necessity.
- → If your mind is clear or your faith is strong you can understand that eternity is more real than the world you experience.
- → Sooner or later, in his time, every man sees the illusion of the world.
- → Ignorance, pain, selfishness and death are not for you, they are not compatible with your true nature.
- → Once the level of spiritual pain has been overcome, the path is resolved in an inner simplification.
- → There is always light beyond the darkness, but the eyes of the body do not see the eternal light.
- → Love is a voluntary choice and a way of knowing.
- → The unconscious experience of the world deludes and weighs down your nature.
- → The world seeks to obscure the higher reality of full truth and draws you towards its ever decomposable and temporary emptiness.
Relative arguments