I am the God of love, who loves children forever, in imperfection, in anguish, in the torments of life, and establishes with his children daily a dialogue, a union of love.
Above all love A hidden inheritance
of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica Argument
→ I, Lord God and father , will transform torments into joy , fears in security , certainties , confusion in clarity , precision , the imperfection which makes you weak , overcome by the insistent forces of the world and the flesh .→ Valid knowledge seeks truth and certainty , and is the first tool for adequate and effective choices and actions .→ A commitment sufficient in duration and intensity can recognize one 's need for certainty and truth .→ In the world the only certainty you have is that I am with you and I love you, but you need a good deal of faith to remember that during a difficulty .
→ When you are unable to love me, to love yourselves , to think of me, to live for me, do it, love me more , I, the Lord , present myself , call you by name and ask you for love .→ From you I do not want torments , judgments , empty words , confused , throwing here and there in the world , I want words that go beyond the sound , calling me father and dad .→ I, the Lord , wish that you love in joy , without sorrow , that every day you slip what does not belong to me with lightness and sobriety .→ I delicately ask to you love , until you reach me, the father who understands your levels , is near you with care , listens and transforms everything in love .
→ Say that pain and difficulties are temporary , they belong to this world and not to you, who are destined to exist forever, with me, in love .→ I love you beyond what happens in the world , because your existence infinitely exceeds the ways and times of the world .→ In being with me, aware of me, in choosing eternity , you are , you realize what you are , what you exist for.→ Denying that truth exists is tantamount to believing that nothing exists or makes sense , up to the extreme consequence of affirming absolute nothingness .
Relative arguments