To love me it is enough to believe in me, trust me, remember my love and our mutual belonging.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → Recognize the miracles I make in your life, in your existence, that happen, that you do not see, because you are taken from the worries of the world and of the flesh.
- → Those who know love do not confuse it with the desire to command.
- → If you are conscious, you can recognize me in every act of love.
- → I invite you to understand that you are not of this world, that I, God, exist, I am perfect, omnipotent, I love you, I have destined you to eternal joy in my world, with me, in full awareness of the truth.
Recurrences in the text
- → Your purpose, your mission is to love me, to surpass the world.
- → Administer, govern your heart, what's inside you.
- → Don't let the big thief rob you.
- → If you don't see the great thief, you're already stripped.
- → What is of the world does not belong to you, leave it to the world, you can not possess it.
- → Only eternity belongs to you.
- → Exchanging your eternity with the illusions of the world is a very bad deal, a very painful loss.
- → To love me it is enough to believe in me, trust me, remember my love and our mutual belonging.
- → Trust me, be calm and think of me with love.
- → Play with the world and smile at its traps, you're mine.
- → My words of love will spread and come true, because I am unlimited love.
- → The world opposes love, hates it and opposes it.
- → As long as it does not exceed the logic of the world, man despairs, but all this is temporary.
- → Your search in the world has ended and now you know who I am, who you are and what the world is.
- → Let the world go its own way, towards nothingness, according to its destiny, not to waste time and energy in trying to conquer it, possess it, save it or enjoy it more than much.
- → Play with the world if you want, but don't you stick to it and don't serve it.
- → Examine the limited and the unlimited, especially in love.
Relative arguments