Even pain finds meaning in love and results in a sign of greater truth.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → The fundamental, basic choice is to know the truth.
- → Awareness is the fruit of wanting to know the truth.
- → Whoever does not conceive and chose the absolute truth cannot know and love it.
- → I am the absolute, the unlimited, the eternal, the pure spirit, the true being.
- → At any time you can choose between me and the temporary, the evanescent, the ambiguous, the material.
- → The unaware does not know that he must and can choose, he believes that life is his delusion in the domain of death and for fear of suffering and dying he loses sight of his immortal nature.
- → The fundamental choice is in the present, not about the acts of the past or what has to happen.
Recurrences in the text
- → When you are not present, other imperfect thoughts invade you.
- → You are me on earth, in the temporary world, in not being.
- → Even pain finds meaning in love and results in a sign of greater truth.
- → In the world there is more truth in pain experienced with love than in well-being.
- → To be able to properly manage evil you must be aware of the truth.
- → The divine nature is already present in man even before his awareness.
- → The unconscious man does not know who he is, he has no idea of the gift he possesses.
- → I have definitely chosen you and this is love.
- → Awareness is the fruit of wanting to know the truth.
- → Look at the world without fear, to find the totally other in us.
- → A certain level of constancy is necessary for one's own determination, self-confidence and knowledge.
- → If you don't see what's going through your mind, you can't drive it.
- → If you don't know me and how I feel about you, you'll hardly recognize the world's deception on your mind.
- → The formula "everything is temporary" implies the inconsistency, uncertainty and ambiguity of itself, of those who affirm it and of those who believe in it.
- → The full understanding of the emptiness of temporary nature requires belonging to the immortal nature.
Relative arguments