Examine the limited and the unlimited, especially in love.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → Living with me, even in the world, is another thing, a good thing.
- → What matters is not what happens in the world, it is what you believe, or rather the amount of truth that you live despite the illusion of the world.
- → Those who live these certainties know that they belong to me, to the truth, and not to the world, in an indestructible bond of mutual love.
- → Keep in mind, remember, announce that I am alive, present, that I love every man like a child, similar, close, that the world is different, hostile, that he who ignores this truth believes that he belongs to the world, supports the work of world, hinders knowledge and love.
Recurrences in the text
- → If the main purpose of man is within the world, this titanic work is overbearing or passive, always a failure.
- → Then man knows God, himself and the world.
- → Examine the limited and the unlimited, especially in love.
- → I love you all and everyone.
- → Come to me, let go of the world, its compromises, its ambiguities, its doubts and traps.
- → A hard game tests your trust and your love for me.
- → The world is so hard that you can't beat it inside, take it away from its malignancy, take it over and enjoy it as much as you want.
- → The hardness of the world is the door to your eternal salvation.
- → I love you and I always want you, don't worry.
- → In the world pain is a source of knowledge, pleasure is a source of illusion, the eye that neglects the eternal exchanges the true for the ambiguous.
- → The destroyer destroys himself and what belongs to him.
- → The world is trying to crush you, don't believe it, trust my love.
- → Love belongs to truth, it is inseparable from truth, if it is not eternal it is not love.
- → The world is an insubstantial structure, subject to destruction, and what belongs to it has the same characteristics.
- → Recognizing the existence of a dimension completely different from the world and one's belonging to it is for man a titanic, necessary work in which he discovers who he is.
- → My son, I love you, trust me.
- → You cannot change the nature of the world, changing the world is not your job.
Relative arguments