My knowledge is immortal, leads to insistent thoughts, without boundaries to you loved, desired and wanted.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → My knowledge is immortal, leads to insistent thoughts, without boundaries to you loved, desired and wanted.
- → When the thoughts reappear, and I know that they reappear insistent and overbearing, they bring you to the world.
- → The son begins to understand that the world deprives him of the love, of the peace, of the truth that the son thought he would find, he asks himself more insistent, clearer questions, such as who he is, who I am, what this life really is, who we really are, asks questions, does not find the answers, seeks, wanders, fails to arrive at what truly satisfies him, begins to understand that the world does not make him happy, he discovers that he cannot rely on the world, on things of the world, he does not feel at peace, he seeks something that guarantees peace, love, that makes him secure, and desires balance.
- → The invisible God hides, in hiding works, reveals with love to be sought, recognized and rediscovered.
- → I don't want the children to let themselves be taken by the snares of the world, of the flesh, by the flattery of that world that drags them and pushes them not to seek me, not to possess me, not to feel loved.
- → Every man seeks love, is convinced that he has found love, has gone absurd passages, that only confused and disappointed him.
- → Man can not do without such slavery, and for the need of love he searches for ways leading him to destruction.
- → The purpose, the end of my children's existence, is the love between me and them discovered, sought, recognized, appeared, accomplished and realized.
Relative arguments