All the game in the world, all the power of illusion tries to influence what you believe, your way of knowing, but it can not change your nature.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → Pain is the manifestation, the sign of unconsciousness, the evil destined to disappear, by nature ephemeral and illusory.
- → To refuse me is at first common, because of the illusion of the world, then it becomes a very painful absurdity, destined to dissolve in the fullness of love.
- → Your destiny is to abandon yourself to me, to desire me until you meet me, to burn for the truth, to put me before the world until you despise it, to choose me definitively, until you join me completely.
- → Your true nature has nothing to do with the absurdities of this world, it has as its destiny eternal life face to face with me.
- → All the game in the world, all the power of illusion tries to influence what you believe, your way of knowing, but it can not change your nature.
- → This pain, this illusion has no sense or outlet in itself, it is functional to your awakening, to ignite your intelligence and your love for the truth.
- → The experience of the world is an illusion, it conditions you continuously, with an enormous amount of false information since your childhood, since you could not recognize it.
- → The world is by nature fragile, temporary, constantly trying to delude and disappoint you, to convince you that you have its nature, that you are fragile, temporary, and you belong to it.
- → Find me as something completely different from the world, necessary for being, for knowing, fullness of being, of truth, of knowledge and love.
- → This path must go through illusion, disappointment, pain, and finally leads you to my presence, to the fullness of love.
- → The fullness of truth must be found individually, but it can be helped by receiving an announcement.
- → The pursuit of happiness, of the fullness of being in the world, any practice aimed at solving the world's problem is illusory.
Relative arguments