The dimension of the result, which is life, truth and love without end, justifies the pain and the difficulties of the path.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → The dimension of the result, which is life, truth and love without end, justifies the pain and the difficulties of the path.
- → Don't doubt it, I'll enlighten everything in you, evil won't prevail over you.
- → When you reach a good level of truth you can no longer abandon it.
- → The development of love and knowledge needs the courage to pursue it.
- → The ambiguity of the world makes it impossible for the correct knowledge of the world on the part of what belongs to it and by those who believe they belong to it.
- → A being of the world cannot recognize the ambiguity of the world.
- → The voice of the world denies me completely or simulates being me.
- → 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.
- → The assertion of the world is absurd, denying all truth, knowledge and meaningful formulation, including itself.
- → Being, truth, logic and love cannot be denied or separated consistently, they are absolutely one.
- → The rule of love is the best, it doesn't judge and doesn't blame.
- → The ambiguity of the world destroys what belongs to it and highlights the futility of choosing it.
- → If you attribute the cause of the imbalances to you or to other men, further passive or aggressive imbalances, related to individual, human guilt, will result.
- → Absolute truth is undoubtedly the main truth to consider and love.
- → The strength of the world proclaims temporariness, tends to distance you from the truth, to chain you to its conditioning, to make you suffer.
- → A commitment sufficient in duration and intensity can recognize one's need for certainty and truth.
- → If you want me, if you choose me within you, you can always find me in the certain light, in spirit and truth.
Relative arguments