The world is by its nature painful, illusory and malicious towards you, but the evil is doomed to end and you are immortal.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → If I am benign and omnipotent, and I allow it, the malignity of the world implies your superiority to it, your divinity.
- → I have established that you can and must experience and overcome illusion.
- → The world is by its nature painful, illusory and malicious towards you, but the evil is doomed to end and you are immortal.
- → I first put you in this uncertain world, so that you could intuit and look for what seems to be missing here entirely.
- → The painful illusion, the absurd kingdom of the world is not your origin or your end.
- → The very physicality of your body collaborates with the deception of the world, and it is not easy for man to understand who he is and to whom he belongs.
- → The realization of man in the light comes from love, it is a loving knowledge.
- → The contrast between you and the world, the pain that the world imposes on you, is the stimulus to go beyond.
- → In the inevitable and unpleasant experience of uncertainty, of temporariness, of contradiction, you can conceive a state of greater fullness as a lack or necessity.
- → Observe the world, until you understand its painful, conditioned, subject to destruction, uncertain and ambiguous nature.
- → The fullness of truth must be found individually, but it can be helped by receiving an announcement.
- → My son is divine and will realize his potential despite any difficulty.
- → Putting temporary things before eternal reality is the root of unconsciousness and all evil.
- → Observe your brothers with my love, as eternal souls, at worst lost in the world, not as bodies, distinguish the eternal and the insubstantial.
- → The repeated experience of temporary and unintended loss of balance can be understood in several ways.
- → Our relationship is not temporary or conditioned by events.
- → Love me and find me.
Relative arguments