My certainty and truth, I know that you fully exist and I yearn for you and I belong beyond all illusions.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → You are the realized, love and light, the one who shines.
- → I know the difficulties of the world and justify.
- → The difficulties are temporary and illusory.
- → You are by nature infinitely stronger and bigger than the world, and if you want it all the way, you can achieve yourself.
- → Physical nature makes choice difficult, pulls towards matter, to which it belongs.
- → 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.
- → Say that pain and difficulties are temporary, they belong to this world and not to you, who are destined to exist forever, with me, in love.
- → You are sons of eternity and eternity is your endless end.
- → The wish for me is fulfilled in a safe, balanced way, does not cause guilt, does not accuse.
- → Observe the world, until you understand its painful, conditioned, subject to destruction, uncertain and ambiguous nature.
- → I don't enjoy your pain, I know what I gave you and how I want you to find it, choose it and learn to use it.
- → My certainty and truth, I know that you fully exist and I yearn for you and I belong beyond all illusions.
- → To correspond with me you must actively counteract the deception that the world always operates.
- → If evil seems to be coming from someone, remember that people go through different levels of awareness, like you.
- → Your identity, what you are, is what you are for me, it does not change, it is not your state, it is not conditioned, it does not depend on events, the world or history.
- → The absurdity of the denial of truth ends up affirming in an absolute way the being of truth, that is, the being of absolute truth.
- → The experience of the world tells man that everything is temporary and probable, it shows total and continuous changeability.
Relative arguments