If you want it, you know that I love you.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → If I am benign and omnipotent, and I allow it, the malignity of the world implies your superiority to it, your divinity.
- → If I, God, love you and allow you to face such a difficulty, my correctness implies that you are immense, divine, similar to me.
- → Orienting, turning, voluntarily directing the mind, knowledge, attention towards God, towards the presence and point of view of God, implies realizing how much you have ignored and neglected God, and recognizing the emptiness of the world.
Recurrences in the text
- → If you want it, you know that I love you.
- → Awareness is the fruit of wanting to know the truth.
- → Whoever does not conceive and chose the absolute truth cannot know and love it.
- → Whoever recognizes the difference between God and the world knows well who he is and to whom he belongs.
- → If you're aware of you and me, nothing can hurt you.
- → If you are conscious, you can recognize me in every act of love.
- → Trust as I do.
- → The world is ruthless, and every ruthless spirituality does not know me well and does not testify me.
- → Those who know me love me, don't fear me.
- → Love is a voluntary choice and a way of knowing.
- → Orienting, turning, voluntarily directing the mind, knowledge, attention towards God, towards the presence and point of view of God, implies realizing how much you have ignored and neglected God, and recognizing the emptiness of the world.
- → 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