The development of love and knowledge needs the courage to pursue it.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → Blessed is he who knows me, loves me and understands me, for he finds his authentic self and can destroy the false images of himself and of me that the world has imposed on him.
- → The temporariness, fragility, pain and contradiction of being in the world are unacceptable to the divine nature of man.
- → The development of love and knowledge needs the courage to pursue it.
- → The inevitable difficulties of the path actively seek to hinder it.
- → If you don't see what's going through your mind, you can't drive it.
- → What may now seem very difficult has a very good reason to realize itself fully, our unlimited nature.
- → The man as son of God, the man as God, God in man are some of the announcements of my project about you.
- → The relationship with the temporary always has a certain difficulty, if you want certainty you have to look beyond the temporary and I hope you do soon.
- → Those who begin to understand my project can accept and overcome any difficulty without losing their direction towards me.
- → In relation to man, the world puts love and knowledge to the test, it hides the truth with an incomprehensible deception from within, from those who consider themselves part of it, it must be examined as a whole, in its general characteristics, from the outside and with detachment.
- → Desiring or practicing forgiveness or balance in difficulties overcomes the conditioning of the world.
- → Don't give all your attention to what is worth much less than your immortal nature, your divine essence.
- → If you can't be as aware as you want, that doesn't mean our bond is flimsy or fragile.
- → Love me and find me.
- → The pains and difficulties of the world will disappear.
- → The world is by nature a labyrinth, it does not contain its own solution.
- → A commitment sufficient in duration and intensity can recognize one's need for certainty and truth.
Relative arguments