Your destiny is endless love and light, beyond all limits, and even the worst darkness and saddest pain ultimately collaborate in that destiny.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → A person sufficiently free from the patterns of the world, gifted with attention and logic, can see things as they are.
- → You can love me now, just the way you are.
- → If I am benign and omnipotent, and I allow it, the malignity of the world implies your superiority to it, your divinity.
- → I first put you in this uncertain world, so that you could intuit and look for what seems to be missing here entirely.
- → In being with me, aware of me, in choosing eternity, you are, you realize what you are, what you exist for.
- → The man taken by the world needs to detach himself from it to begin to see the truth.
- → I know well your difficulties in this world, that contrasts your nature, drugs you and falls asleep with its illusions.
- → To tempt the things of the world, or to hope that they will move the way you want them to, is still unsatisfactory because of their nature.
- → The development of knowledge and love in man goes through pain and needs your balance to help you and others achieve it.
- → In this world, the immortal can delude himself into being temporary, but what is temporary can never be enough for the immortal.
- → Your destiny is endless love and light, beyond all limits, and even the worst darkness and saddest pain ultimately collaborate in that destiny.
- → Sooner or later the son finds himself wondering if the truth exists.
- → Denying that truth exists is tantamount to believing that nothing exists or makes sense, up to the extreme consequence of affirming absolute nothingness.
Relative arguments