I love you, I am omnipotent and I do not lose what I love.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → This world offers man the possibility of making the opposite choice to God, of denying, rejecting God and experiencing its consequences.
- → The resulting pain is an important sign of the consequence of illusion and of adhesion to illusion.
- → The choice explores the possibilities of adhering to the truth or being prisoners of illusion.
- → I love you, I am omnipotent and I do not lose what I love.
- → Leave the world alone, because it does not love you, it does not belong to you and it is not your destiny.
- → I allow the cosmic illusion to try to deceive you, because I know the unlimited potential I have placed in you.
- → I can and want everything.
- → The current constraints on your knowledge make it difficult for you to understand the truth, but they do not belong to you, they are the work of the world.
- → Those who know love do not confuse it with the desire to command.
- → If you look at yourself, you can see in yourself my very nature, beyond the selfish superstructures that the world has imposed on you.
- → The world can only take away from you what belongs to it, illusory and temporary things.
- → The voice of the world denies me completely or simulates being me.
- → If you are conscious, you can recognize me in every act of love.
- → The malignity of the world is amplified, not caused, by the man who ignores it, deceived, possessed, drugged by the world, in a state of painful slavery.
- → 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.
- → Observe your brothers with my love, as eternal souls, at worst lost in the world, not as bodies, distinguish the eternal and the insubstantial.
- → The world does not love, and therefore deceives, destroys and annihilates itself.
Relative arguments