You are called to choose between the absolute truth and the illusion of the world, the worst of drugs.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → What is relative, the world is temporary, deceptive, intentionally false, it must be understood for what it is, it must not be loved, desired, overestimated, it must be let go, it must be seen as non-existent, illusory and not feared.
- → The world, as it is, is a fun game, if it is seen with the Lord.
- → Don't worry, let the unpleasant world fade away.
- → An attitude of fear or flight with respect to pain and the world makes man a slave, reinforces the illusion he fears.
- → These are the temptations of the world, inconsistent and temporary phenomena.
- → Hold on, stay aware of me, and you'll be stronger than the world, you can't be won by illusion.
- → Remember me, who I am, who you are for me, love me and the world will not strike you inside, it will not make you its slave.
- → Observe the always present truth, by nature still and eternal, even in illusion.
- → This world with its traps is illusion without love.
- → The world is an evanescent illusion, it seems beautiful, but if you love it, it poisons you, but not permanently.
- → You are called to choose between the absolute truth and the illusion of the world, the worst of drugs.
- → Pain is illusory.
- → Do not love lying, the great thief, the world, illusion, not being.
- → 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.
- → The world strongly projects its materialistic illusion, but it is destined to show its inconsistency.
- → Sooner or later, in his time, every man sees the illusion of the world.
- → The truth cannot be defeated, for I am the almighty, the eternal, and I love you as my neighbor, son, similar to me, as myself.
Relative arguments