This path must go through illusion, disappointment, pain, and finally leads you to my presence, to the fullness of love.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → I am your destiny, if you want me.
- → You're everything to me and I care about you more than anything in the world.
- → The knowledge of the contrast between my omnipotent and loving nature, and the enormous malignancy of the cosmos, shows you what I have given you from the beginning, my nature.
- → Since it denies the absolute, the world is a self-referential negative formulation, it is false.
- → I'm with you and I love you, trust you and me and our love.
- → I have revealed to you who I am, who you are, what the world is, and my plan for every man to freely choose infinite love.
- → This world proclaims and makes us experience the temporariness and precariousness of everything, in the false perspective of the final victory of pure nothingness, of total annihilation.
- → This path must go through illusion, disappointment, pain, and finally leads you to my presence, to the fullness of love.
- → If I, God, love you and allow you to face such a difficulty, my correctness implies that you are immense, divine, similar to me.
- → Trust me, everything will fall into place, because you belong to me, I am all-powerful and I love you.
- → Ignoring, not observing, not evaluating, not choosing one's object of interest, one's goal, is a lack of responsibility in thinking, a possible cause of error and pain.
- → Observe the hidden truth beyond illusion, the love relationship between truth and knowledge, how much the truth precedes you, loves you and attracts you.
- → Finally everything is destined to unite, reason and desire converge in love.
- → Your destiny is written in your nature and guarantees your fulfillment and the inconsistency of all fear.
- → Denying that truth exists is tantamount to believing that nothing exists or makes sense, up to the extreme consequence of affirming absolute nothingness.
- → 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.
- → Recognizing the absolute truth and the absurdity of its denial, the son remains with the problem of what the world is, the changing object of his experience, the source of an equally changing knowledge.
Relative arguments