I can love you everywhere, but love is uncertain in bodies, in sensations, in what is temporary, it is certain in what is eternal.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → Recognizing the absurdity of denying or neglecting the existence of truth implies absolute truth.
- → If you're sure the world is uncertain, you know you don't belong to it.
- → Certainty belongs to awareness, it is full realization, a permanent state of truth, a definitive, absolute, non-changeable value.
- → The opposites of negative self-referential phrases are true in an absolute, unconditional way.
- → 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.
- → Without me, you lose yourself, the world drags you into its illusion, it robs you of the truth, of your eternal identity.
- → Infinite love is also in bodies, but certainly beyond bodies, even in sensations, but certainly beyond sensations, even in temporariness, but certainly beyond temporariness.
- → I can love you everywhere, but love is uncertain in bodies, in sensations, in what is temporary, it is certain in what is eternal.
- → If you believe in me, in our bond, in indestructibility, you cannot take into account or worry about what is ephemeral.
- → The trial that now touches the world is for the benefit of all of you, my children, it shows you the ephemeral nature of things in the world and draws your attention to me, your eternal need for love and certainty.
- → The truth is eternal, the illusion is temporary.
Relative arguments