If my son looks inside, he discovers me, my love, his love and the love between me as father and them as sons.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → Love opens the doors of the heart, reason, light, knowledge, and eternity, which I am, the loved father, who loves you.
- → Together they recognize each other as brothers and children of love
- → The father, the essence of the father, works wonders, even before we was he thought of us with love.
- → When I speak of coming, I speak of knowledge that is fixed in reason, is absorbed in the heart, in thoughts, and intervenes in each son.
- → Every man recognizes my face with love, and so he knows me, the father, all my kingdom and revelation, in which he joins me.
- → Having come to this knowledge, my children want to interrupt that slavery, be no more prisoners of a collapsing building, understand the illusions, the disappointments born of the world and the flesh.
- → Have confidence in you and me.
- → Love keeps me alive and makes me know.
- → This is the dwelling of the spirit of the father, of the child, eternal, based on knowledge and pure conscience.
- → The realized son finally accomplished everything he wanted, for which he lived to know me, can understand the parts of his life he thought empty, he fills that nonexistent vacuum, he is completely alive, true, full, shining and brilliant.
- → The life of my child is based on the knowledge of the love between me and him, that he already had from the origin.
- → If that does not happen, my son can always think of me and love me in a gesture, in a thought, in an action, in a goal accomplished in a moment.
- → If my son looks inside, he discovers me, my love, his love and the love between me as father and them as sons.
- → You are the children of light to whom you belong.
- → God, the father, the spirit, my being, my knowledge is endless and sweetness love.
- → Who knows constantly tries me, does not get lost in the journey and walks with me.
Relative arguments