The son who recognizes me knows me in the face, in essence, knows all about me, love in all its truth and fullness.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → I am here, I exist, I am present, alive, working, never leave you, I want to love you and that you love me.
- → Tell everyone that I exist and am not unreachable.
- → I exist, I exist completely, I am eternal and I am for you alive source of life.
- → Behold the father loves you, he will attract and upset your whole existence with his love.
- → I look to you with love, exist in the greatest and immense fullness of love.
- → The children feel accomplished, with me, in me, realized in my person, eternity, immortality, spirit, infinite, absolute, where I reside and live, in the house of love.
- → I love you, I think and am with you eternally.
- → I am always the father, the eternal spirit of the father who speaks in his will and gospel of love.
- → I am the Lord God of the covenant, revelation, immortality, justice, love and peace.
- → The wonder between me father and you children is in love, that is me, it is discovered every day falling in love with me as love, with my eternity, it is in the revelation, completeness, totality, and the realization of the ultimate end, God father.
- → I am always with you, always.
- → The game of the world is painful and misleading, it produces uncertainty, it tries to take away from man the awareness, the memory of his identity, of his destiny.
- → Your identity, what you are, is what you are for me, it does not change, it is not your state, it is not conditioned, it does not depend on events, the world or history.
- → You were created to seek your true identity, to be great, confident, free to love and be loved.
- → You have the task of orienting yourself and choosing between opposing logics until you understand which one you love and identifies you.
- → When you forget me you lose yourself too, you are alienated, robbed of your identity, alien to yourself, forbidden by the truth.
Relative arguments