If I, God, love you and allow you to face such a difficulty, my correctness implies that you are immense, divine, similar to me.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → Cross the world and its darkness to discover that you and I are completely different, eternal, wonderful and blessed.
- → Look at the world without fear, to find the totally other in us.
- → You're everything to me and I care about you more than anything in the world.
- → The things, the events of this world are worth infinitely less than what is eternal, and you are.
- → What passes and ends is completely different from me, but it is always an opportunity for love.
- → A certain level of constancy is necessary for one's own determination, self-confidence and knowledge.
- → The knowledge of the contrast between my omnipotent and loving nature, and the enormous malignancy of the cosmos, shows you what I have given you from the beginning, my nature.
- → Every level of love is pleasing to me in its time.
- → The formula "everything is temporary" implies the inconsistency, uncertainty and ambiguity of itself, of those who affirm it and of those who believe in it.
- → The full understanding of the emptiness of temporary nature requires belonging to the immortal nature.
- → You are able to defeat the deception of the world, because it is quite different from us.
- → All evil will turn into ardor in you and you will realize an infinite love, worthy of mine.
- → 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.
- → If I, God, love you and allow you to face such a difficulty, my correctness implies that you are immense, divine, similar to me.
- → The cosmic illusion continually attacks you through all that of it to which you attach yourself, beginning with the body, yet this illusion, however great it may be, can do nothing to you.
Relative arguments