I definitely love you.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → The world, as it is, is a fun game, if it is seen with the Lord.
- → Don't worry, let the unpleasant world fade away.
- → An attitude of fear or flight with respect to pain and the world makes man a slave, reinforces the illusion he fears.
- → These are the temptations of the world, inconsistent and temporary phenomena.
- → Hold on, stay aware of me, and you'll be stronger than the world, you can't be won by illusion.
- → Remember me, who I am, who you are for me, love me and the world will not strike you inside, it will not make you its slave.
Recurrences in the text
- → The experience of pain in the world makes sense.
- → Man can and must understand and choose, but this does not exclude the experience of pain.
- → I definitely love you.
- → This world offers man the possibility of making the opposite choice to God, of denying, rejecting God and experiencing its consequences.
- → Ignoring the difference between temporary and eternal is the cause of pain.
- → Hold on, stay aware of me, and you'll be stronger than the world, you can't be won by illusion.
- → The only solution to the contrast between the opposing natures of man and the world is in the awareness of eternal truth.
- → The fundamental, basic choice is to know the truth.
- → The depth of darkness, which now envelops you in the world, exalts and highlights by contrast the splendour of our love.
- → To understand what I give you is a great good for you.
- → The experience of the world is an illusion, it conditions you continuously, with an enormous amount of false information since your childhood, since you could not recognize it.
- → The world is empty, uncertain, unreal, it's not your homeland, it has only a brief deceptive experience in common with you.
- → In this world, material logic imposes itself on man before he is able to defend himself, but it is subjected to destruction, and this painful bond pushes man to seek beyond.
- → I am always with you, and knowing this is a great good for you, but this continuity is not bound by what you experience.
Relative arguments