Every suffering calls you to return aware, to remember that every event in the world is empty, evanescent, non-existent, and we are real, eternal.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → If I am benign and omnipotent, and I allow it, the malignity of the world implies your superiority to it, your divinity.
- → The world is by its nature painful, illusory and malicious towards you, but the evil is doomed to end and you are immortal.
- → The realization of man in the light comes from love, it is a loving knowledge.
- → The knowledge of love goes beyond the limits of the world, harmoniously generating a benign way of being, a balanced response to difficulties.
- → The solution to the world's problems does not belong to the world, it transcends it.
- → The unlimited going beyond is the secret of your and my being, the boundless divinity.
- → In this effort, the awareness of your and my immense love emerges in you.
- → The man taken by the world needs to detach himself from it to begin to see the truth.
- → Your experience of my opposite offers you the possibility to choose me with a love similar to mine, because you are similar to me, divine.
- → Every suffering calls you to return aware, to remember that every event in the world is empty, evanescent, non-existent, and we are real, eternal.
- → 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.
- → You can choose me or reject me, but not forever, the truth of your nature will eventually prevail over any illusion
- → The truth is eternal, the illusion is temporary.
- → The unconscious experience of the world deludes and weighs down your nature.
- → The world seeks to obscure the higher reality of full truth and draws you towards its ever decomposable and temporary emptiness.
- → A time of recollection and solitude strengthens the mind and detaches you from the dust of nothingness.
- → If you don't have the strength to seek and see what's always true, you can't have meaningful relationships.
Relative arguments