I desire children, I do not desire ghosts, weak, fragile men, without love, disappointed, deceived, insecure, afraid of loving and being loved.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → My knowledge is immortal, leads to insistent thoughts, without boundaries to you loved, desired and wanted.
- → When the thoughts reappear, and I know that they reappear insistent and overbearing, they bring you to the world.
- → The son begins to understand that the world deprives him of the love, of the peace, of the truth that the son thought he would find, he asks himself more insistent, clearer questions, such as who he is, who I am, what this life really is, who we really are, asks questions, does not find the answers, seeks, wanders, fails to arrive at what truly satisfies him, begins to understand that the world does not make him happy, he discovers that he cannot rely on the world, on things of the world, he does not feel at peace, he seeks something that guarantees peace, love, that makes him secure, and desires balance.
- → I wish you walk with me, in light, in love and in joy.
- → I want children who announce, listen, speak in light and in love.
- → Children, I love you, I want love, joy, abandonment and trust.
- → I want love in abundance, to fill and overflow every my container.
- → If you discover the greatness of this desire for love, you will never leave me.
- → Happy is the one who sees me as the purpose, the center, the root of his existence, of his life, of thoughts, of heart and of reason.
- → Do not be afraid to love, to live in love, to live for me, because the Lord comes with strength in your hearts, in your reason, and even in your reason for existence.
- → Another truth is that there are no other gods, I am God, one, father, master, and your only certainty.
- → I am the eternal sovereign, the living God, the strength, the light, the fire, the fire of love, a fire that flows eternally, I live in you, exist from eternity and teach you to do things for love.
Relative arguments