The awakening of man in the world requires will, love, balance, an intelligent and confident energy.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → The awakening of man in the world requires will, love, balance, an intelligent and confident energy.
- → The temporary and the eternal, the finite and the infinite are two not comparable dimensions, completely different.
- → If you do not choose it is because you do not distinguish the differences, whoever ignores the way of heaven cannot choose it.
- → Every act of love has great value, it's a jewel.
- → I am much closer and more intimate to you than your sensations, which are signs, of your body, a shell, of much of what you thought you were, that is, an external construction mediated with the world.
- → Nothing in the world is worth as much as being with me, the ambiguous and the true have nothing in common, they are strangers.
- → Please remember me, don't let the world take you, for your own good.
- → The unconscious needs rules, but whoever is close to the truth easily finds the appropriate act.
- → Ignorance, pain, selfishness and death are not for you, they are not compatible with your true nature.
- → If you are distracted by too many and ambiguous intermediate elements, you cultivate pain, you do not seek, you do not understand the initial, final, unique and present cause.
- → Every choice has the same nature as its object, it loves its object, unites and adapts to it.
- → A strong attachment to what belongs to the world is failure, because man cannot possess what belongs to the world.
- → To correspond with me you must actively counteract the deception that the world always operates.
- → In this world, the immortal can delude himself into being temporary, but what is temporary can never be enough for the immortal.
- → The unconscious experience of the world deludes and weighs down your nature.
- → The strength of the world proclaims temporariness, tends to distance you from the truth, to chain you to its conditioning, to make you suffer.
Relative arguments