I allow this pain in view of a project of infinite love, that overturns and transcends life in the world.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → Awareness is the fruit of wanting to know the truth.
- → Whoever does not conceive and chose the absolute truth cannot know and love it.
- → Whoever recognizes the difference between God and the world knows well who he is and to whom he belongs.
- → If you're aware of you and me, nothing can hurt you.
- → The world tries to keep you from knowing me, but you can love me in the world.
- → To win the world, man must have an end beyond the world, and adhere to that end until he considers the secondary world, devoid of true reality.
- → The conditionings of materiality are very strong, unbeatable on its plane.
- → Temporaneity, fragility, a way of being destined not to be, expresses the contradiction, the ambiguity of the world and of what belongs to it.
- → The ambiguity of the world makes it impossible for the correct knowledge of the world on the part of what belongs to it and by those who believe they belong to it.
- → I allow this pain in view of a project of infinite love, that overturns and transcends life in the world.
- → 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.
- → Love is a voluntary choice and a way of knowing.
- → Orienting, turning, voluntarily directing the mind, knowledge, attention towards God, towards the presence and point of view of God, implies realizing how much you have ignored and neglected God, and recognizing the emptiness of the world.
- → The world and the life in it are what they are, they have a nature that does not accord with yours and mine, they are for you only a short and temporary experience, they are not your destiny.
Relative arguments