The development of love and knowledge needs the courage to pursue it.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → The temporariness, fragility, pain and contradiction of being in the world are unacceptable to the divine nature of man.
- → The development of love and knowledge needs the courage to pursue it.
- → The inevitable difficulties of the path actively seek to hinder it.
- → If you don't lead it, your mind imposes on you the contents of the world, sooner or later painful.
- → If you don't see what's going through your mind, you can't drive it.
- → If you don't know me and how I feel about you, you'll hardly recognize the world's deception on your mind.
- → At the end of this journey you discover eternal life and the fact that it has always attracted and guided you.
- → The world is by nature fragile, temporary, constantly trying to delude and disappoint you, to convince you that you have its nature, that you are fragile, temporary, and you belong to it.
- → If you remember that I am alive, present, eternal and I love you completely, the world can no longer harm you.
- → Whoever neglects me is guided by the conditioning of the world and the body, he has the mind and thoughts on the material plane.
- → Observe the world, until you understand its painful, conditioned, subject to destruction, uncertain and ambiguous nature.
- → Desiring or practicing forgiveness or balance in difficulties overcomes the conditioning of the world.
- → The quality of my love for you is obscured by the world and by what belongs to it, finished, limited and conditioned.
- → I know that it is not easy to be aware in this world, that the matter in which you now find yourself is bound by conditionings that you can now only partially regulate, you cannot exclude.
- → The repeated experience of temporary and unintended loss of balance can be understood in several ways.
- → Love me and find me.
- → A commitment sufficient in duration and intensity can recognize one's need for certainty and truth.
Relative arguments