The son who recognizes me knows me in the face, in essence, knows all about me, love in all its truth and fullness.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → Love makes my children free, if it is really recognized in essence, in the root, in the depth of birth and origin.
- → I make you children, free in joy, in love, here I am, alive, alive for you, I am beside you and I care for you.
- → The world does not make my children free, it makes my children slaves and prisoners of an invention of the world.
- → I want free children in love, in thoughts, who love me, who love, that they are always loved by me, for a long time and in time.
- → I arouse, I transmit love, I am eternal unity, freedom of love, the Lord God, infinite love, the only God of love, clear source that restores.
- → Your choices are not conscious, not dictated by heart or by reason, are dictated by the world that oppresses you, it deludes you, finally throws you away and destroys you.
- → Think that your father never leaves you alone, that you have not been created to be prisoners, that you are free and children of the father.
- → Now you know what can hurt you, what does not make you know me and you, who are love.
- → Think also for a moment that you are never alone, that the father is with you, keeps you, that you are very precious.
- → Think that your existence can not end or become reality in a self-destruct world.
- → The man deluded by the world ignores my love for something that is nonexistent and he does not understand what exists.
- → Recognize the miracles I make in your life, in your existence, that happen, that you do not see, because you are taken from the worries of the world and of the flesh.
- → If you look in silence you will understand more importantly, what completes your existence, that apparent envelope which inebriates, imprisons you into an iniquitous and failing system.
- → Take possession of love, of you, of me, of this identity, of this eternity, which exists and is for you.
Relative arguments