I have created you for love and put in love.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → In the book of life, that I am, which is my being in the totality, is written about the belonging, the knowledge, the justice that is between me and you.
- → The justice between me and you is not of the world, it is not reflected in guilt, it is of the spirit of the father, it is to have understanding of the relationship between me as father and you as sons, it is reflected, it spreads in the love that is not poor, not solitary, not superficial, it is deep, complete, that, if it is already known and possessed, it fills, transforms my son.
Recurrences in the text
- → I fill, possess and overwhelm my children.
- → I am the Lord God who loves you from the depths of his being, the great soul of eternity and of his children.
- → You, my children, possess my love.
- → You already possess these gifts, because you were created only for love.
- → I have created you for love and put in love.
- → Now you know, you know me, the father who loves, you know only that I love, free and possess.
- → Every my child has the light and the love.
- → Communicate to me this love for me that you already have and possess.
- → This is the wonder and preciousness of belonging.
- → You need to know what you own.
- → Keep a balance that you already have.
- → Belonging to the father with the aware conviction of infinite love makes you shine.
- → The son who stands beside the brother who has recognized me, understands that the other belongs to what surpasses the world, to an unexplored boundary, this new dimension, revelation, is convinced of the kingdom, of eternity, of this well-being that he sees in the brother who has discovered it, and he too wants to shine.
- → Rejoice in me father, in this love you possess and I give every day only to my children.
- → In the book of life, that I am, which is my being in the totality, is written about the belonging, the knowledge, the justice that is between me and you.
Relative arguments