Love opens the doors of the heart, reason, light, knowledge, and eternity, which I am, the loved father, who loves you.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → This love makes him fully acquainted with himself and me.
- → Open, open wide your eyes gently in me until you acknowledge me.
- → Love opens the doors of the heart, reason, light, knowledge, and eternity, which I am, the loved father, who loves you.
- → Having come to this knowledge, my children want to interrupt that slavery, be no more prisoners of a collapsing building, understand the illusions, the disappointments born of the world and the flesh.
- → The correct knowledge allows each son to distinguish clearly, definitively, who is the father, to live in love, in the presence of the father, and to know that he is important in me and for me.
- → This knowledge of oneself and me already exists in my child, is forgotten and removed.
- → God, the father, the spirit, my being, my knowledge is endless and sweetness love.
- → The solution of the world exists, is real, true, transcends the world and is eternal life.
- → Everything in the world, including the whole world, is ridiculous compared to eternal love.
- → Love can not be annihilated, it is eternal, a destiny, your destiny.
- → What lasts forever is true, real, indestructible, sublime.
- → I remain forever and you remain with me forever.
- → The pain of the world makes no sense in the world, it has its perfect meaning beyond the temporary world, in eternal love.
- → The only solution to the contrast between the opposing natures of man and the world is in the awareness of eternal truth.
- → Without me, you lose yourself, the world drags you into its illusion, it robs you of the truth, of your eternal identity.
- → This world is an illusion that cannot satisfy you as much as you want, only in the eternal dimension can you find who you are.
- → If you remember that I am alive, present, eternal and I love you completely, the world can no longer harm you.
Relative arguments