When you recognize the world for what it is, you leave it to its destiny and turn to me, you will be ready for your destiny of eternity.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → You already have my love, the treasure, the greatness that I have given you from the origins and when I thought of you.
- → My project is blossoming, the greatness of being children who are convinced to love and have pure thoughts.
- → I am the soul and the greatness of love.
- → Between me and my children the difference does not exist, there is in common the love, the greatness and the eternal destiny for which they were created.
- → The purpose, the end of my children's existence, is the love between me and them discovered, sought, recognized, appeared, accomplished and realized.
- → You are children of light, not of darkness, of love, not of hatred, of certainty, not of uncertainty, in peace, not in war.
- → These are the children of light and not of darkness, who have pulled out, nourished and revealed what I have given them from the beginning, which is love.
- → Every unaware man is possessed by the darkness of the world.
- → The divine nature of every man in manifesting itself recognizes and explains the immense light hidden in the darkness of the world.
- → The greatness of man is shown and revealed in recognizing the relationship of infinite love with God and the dark action of the world.
- → Temporaneity, fragility, a way of being destined not to be, expresses the contradiction, the ambiguity of the world and of what belongs to it.
- → 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.
- → The world is by its nature painful, illusory and malicious towards you, but the evil is doomed to end and you are immortal.
- → Let the world go its own way, towards nothingness, according to its destiny, not to waste time and energy in trying to conquer it, possess it, save it or enjoy it more than much.
Relative arguments