I'm with you and I love you, trust you and me and our love.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → My nature desires a full loving relationship with you.
- → If I am benign and omnipotent, and I allow it, the malignity of the world implies your superiority to it, your divinity.
- → The world is by its nature painful, illusory and malicious towards you, but the evil is doomed to end and you are immortal.
- → I'm with you and I love you, trust you and me and our love.
- → Your destiny is to accomplish this feat, but only because my son can do it.
- → Your experience of my opposite offers you the possibility to choose me with a love similar to mine, because you are similar to me, divine.
- → Don't give all your attention to what is worth much less than your immortal nature, your divine essence.
- → If you attribute the cause of the imbalances to you or to other men, further passive or aggressive imbalances, related to individual, human guilt, will result.
- → If you understand that the imbalances you suffer are caused by the mechanical structure of the world, the idea of human guilt is lost in you and the door to forgiveness is opened.
- → Our relationship is not temporary or conditioned by events.
- → Love me and find me.
- → You do not belong to this world, you belong to eternity, you are mine and immortal.
- → Valid knowledge seeks truth and certainty, and is the first tool for adequate and effective choices and actions.
- → When he recognizes the emptiness of the world, the child knows that he does not belong to the world, because he seeks and possesses the truth that the world does not have.
Relative arguments