To understand who you are no matter what happens in the world, it's enough that I love you.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → I love you and I'm always with you.
Recurrences in the text
- → The light will catch everyone.
- → The world passes and disappears, my words are eternal.
- → The things of the world are illusory, temporary, not real.
- → You're my son, you're myself in the world.
- → The game of the world is about to end, it is running out.
- → The world must end and it is about to do it.
- → The eternal is infinite.
- → Temporary is finite.
- → The finite, each finite is zero with respect to infinity, in relation to the infinite.
- → Every temporary phenomenon is zero in relation to the eternal.
- → Understanding the non-worth of the world, you know of being eternal, divine.
- → But if you value the world as non-null, that is, you give it a value of truth, then evaluate yourself as finite, similar to the world, temporary.
- → If you believe the world important to God, you consider God similar to the world, limited, finite, relative, and you do not know God.
- → I love you and I'm always with you.
- → The limits of the world are the occasion for this journey of love.
- → To understand who you are no matter what happens in the world, it's enough that I love you.
- → Divine fullness does not include nothingness, the appearance of the world.
Relative arguments