The realization of man in the light comes from love, it is a loving knowledge.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → The enormous difficulty that man has to solve is appropriate to his divine potential.
- → The smallest of my sons is incomparably superior to everything of the world.
- → The ambiguity of the world makes it impossible for the correct knowledge of the world on the part of what belongs to it and by those who believe they belong to it.
- → A being of the world cannot recognize the ambiguity of the world.
- → Living with God in this world means putting him first, considering him the only reason to live, one's own goal, feeling that one wants only him, living only for him.
- → If you want it, the unlimited good is yours.
- → The pains, the guilt and the hardships of this world are nothing to your immortal nature.
- → The realization of man in the light comes from love, it is a loving knowledge.
- → In the world, humanity is drugged, in a deep state of unawareness.
- → 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.
- → Observe the world, until you understand its painful, conditioned, subject to destruction, uncertain and ambiguous nature.
- → The man taken by the world needs to detach himself from it to begin to see the truth.
- → Your destiny is to accomplish this feat, but only because my son can do it.
- → Mind me, take care of me more than the events of the world.
- → Don't give all your attention to what is worth much less than your immortal nature, your divine essence.
- → Every suffering calls you to return aware, to remember that every event in the world is empty, evanescent, non-existent, and we are real, eternal.
- → To correspond with me you must actively counteract the deception that the world always operates.
- → If you cannot overlook the evil you encounter, examine the cause, do not seek the fault.
Relative arguments