The father sees the son as son, in love, in understanding, loves his son, rejoices if the son finds the home of the father and his father.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → My children struggle, climb, in a life that passes in trouble, in the poverty of love, of reason, they believe they are limited, they have thoughts that do not develop towards me, ears that do not listen, a heart as big as the mine, which they themselves limit in love.
- → God loves himself in man, so he loves man as himself.
- → In this sense God is a father in a total, real and not figurative way.
- → Those who are now unaware in turn will one day shine and recognize my love.
- → My children now understand this condition, they do not see me as the owner, they see me as a father, as God who loves them and as a spirit that enlightens them in love.
- → Only I reveal to my children in the heart, in reason, every day, with delicacy to make me know in love, as a father, I have the revelation, I am God, the revelation, the teacher teaching with love, the father dealing with his children in understanding, in love, and who does not care about the mistakes of his children.
- → Children, choose, look for me, the king who joins you, who makes himself known as a father and not as a king.
Recurrences in the text
- → My home, where I live is light and love.
- → Now my child is inside me and dwells in me.
- → Every child dwells in me and I in him.
- → The dwelling is the home where my spirit moves in its great essence.
- → The dwelling where I live is the house, the sanctuary of love and covenant between me and you.
- → I, the father, comfort, love and live in my home.
- → I have already said that the place where I live is love and light.
- → The father sees the son as son, in love, in understanding, loves his son, rejoices if the son finds the home of the father and his father.
- → Come to me and my holy home.
- → In the beginning God was the essence, the spirit of God was dwelling and dwells happy.
Relative arguments