I love you and I want you freely.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → If you do not remember me, the world invades your conscience, conditions you, robs you of your transcendent nature, possesses you, makes you believe that you are similar, mortal, fragile.
- → The truth cannot be defeated, for I am the almighty, the eternal, and I love you as my neighbor, son, similar to me, as myself.
- → The difficulty of choice requires a love similar to mine, immense and unconditional.
Recurrences in the text
- → I love you and I want you freely.
- → I am free and I want you free.
- → This is the lighting.
- → Always think of me, remember my presence, desire me, choose me strongly, talk to me and listen to me.
- → Remember yourself and me.
- → The opposites of negative self-referential phrases are true in an absolute, unconditional way.
- → I, God, love you according to my nature, in an infinite, unlimited and unconditional way.
- → The darkness of the world tries by every means and at every moment to convince you that you belong to it.
- → Only the certainty of eternal truth and his bond to it can enable man to overcome the burden of the world.
- → I love you, I have chosen you in a total, unlimited and unconditional way.
- → Being full, total love and unconditional choice coincide.
- → Your being, what you are, is not defined or influenced by the world, by events.
- → Your dignity, your nature is divine, it does not change.
- → If you do not put energy into guiding your mind, it leads you towards pleasant or unpleasant thoughts and feelings, towards less awareness and freedom.
- → A mind focused on internal goals of the world is a slave to the world and chains to the world.
- → Strengthening the mind with concentration without adjusting its goals leads to more pain, but opens up the possibility of a later turn towards higher goals.
- → The concentrated mind can come to understand clearly the nature of the world and the need to overcome it, until it reaches the light beyond the world.
Relative arguments