I have made you know in love me and the law of love.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → The world tries to keep you from knowing me, but you can love me in the world.
- → You are by nature infinitely stronger and bigger than the world, and if you want it all the way, you can achieve yourself.
- → The world is only good at lying, it cannot deceive those who know that they belong to the truth in an indissoluble way.
- → You are completely true, you are me, you have me in essence and destiny, you are only mine forever.
- → If and when you know who you're, you can let go, you can trust me, love me and let me act.
- → Don't confuse me with the world's way of being, with what it isn't.
Recurrences in the text
- → Raise your mind and heart from earthly things to the things of heaven.
- → I have made you know in love me and the law of love.
- → Don't worry, let the unpleasant world fade away.
- → The experience of pain in the world makes sense.
- → 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.
- → Man can and must understand and choose, but this does not exclude the experience of pain.
- → I definitely love you.
- → Do not be afraid, the world can not do anything to you.
- → Ignoring the difference between temporary and eternal is the cause of pain.
- → Admire already now, with faith, what everyone will admire in his time, in full realization.
- → The world tries to keep you from knowing me, but you can love me in the world.
- → You can shine in the darkness of the world, if you want it, if you want me.
- → Temporaneity, fragility, a way of being destined not to be, expresses the contradiction, the ambiguity of the world and of what belongs to it.
- → To understand what I give you is a great good for you.
- → In this world, material logic imposes itself on man before he is able to defend himself, but it is subjected to destruction, and this painful bond pushes man to seek beyond.
Relative arguments