I recognize you, I recognize me in you, I value you as worthy of the greatest love, I love you.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → Remember that I love you, because this truth is your lifeline in the world.
- → The world is by nature fragile, temporary, constantly trying to delude and disappoint you, to convince you that you have its nature, that you are fragile, temporary, and you belong to it.
- → If you remember that I am alive, present, eternal and I love you completely, the world can no longer harm you.
- → The very physicality of your body collaborates with the deception of the world, and it is not easy for man to understand who he is and to whom he belongs.
Recurrences in the text
- → If you choose eternity, you realize who you are, your true nature.
- → God is both being in his immutable nature and becoming in the realization of his project.
- → God Father is not jealous of himself, of his absolute nature, of his unity and uniqueness.
- → This project is intimately connected to the loving nature of God, so it is God himself.
- → Only tension, man's love for God can overcome pain.
- → Nothing temporary is comparable to that which is immortal in nature.
- → You will come to me naturally, when you realize who you have always been.
- → 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.
- → You too are by nature light, but if you don't know it, the world, the darkness, takes possession of you.
- → The things, the events of this world are worth infinitely less than what is eternal, and you are.
- → I recognize you, I recognize me in you, I value you as worthy of the greatest love, I love you.
- → Remember that I love you, because this truth is your lifeline in the world.
- → The world is by nature fragile, temporary, constantly trying to delude and disappoint you, to convince you that you have its nature, that you are fragile, temporary, and you belong to it.
- → The world imposes considerable limits and illusions on you, which you must experience and which one day will appear to you for what they are, little, nothing, a game compared to what I give you.
- → 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.
Relative arguments