Say that pain and difficulties are temporary, they belong to this world and not to you, who are destined to exist forever, with me, in love.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → The world can only take away from you what belongs to it, illusory and temporary things.
- → The man as son of God, the man as God, God in man are some of the announcements of my project about you.
- → Say that pain and difficulties are temporary, they belong to this world and not to you, who are destined to exist forever, with me, in love.
- → Be certain that an eternally true reality exists and belongs to you.
- → If the mind generalizes the voice of the world, it says that everything is temporary.
- → To believe it is necessary to believe that there is truth, a reality that is always true, eternal.
- → I am always united to my purpose, because I always love.
- → Truth will emerge immaculate after the absurdity of its denial, and I myself will rejoice fully in your realization in the one end of the greatest love.
- → To begin to see the conditioning of the mind you have to go beyond the world, relate to me individually, keep me in mind, talk to me and sometimes listen to me.
- → If you do not choose it is because you do not distinguish the differences, whoever ignores the way of heaven cannot choose it.
- → If your mind is clear or your faith is strong you can understand that eternity is more real than the world you experience.
- → The world strongly projects its materialistic illusion, but it is destined to show its inconsistency.
- → Sooner or later, in his time, every man sees the illusion of the world.
- → For a few moments don't let your mind or your attention wander on what is worth little, and turn to me with love.
- → The greater your love, the more you resemble me and realize you.
- → 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.
Relative arguments