My loving nature, my being love, pushes me to create, to a becoming of love.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → To sell off one's infinite dignity for what disappears as soon as it appears, worsens one's existence.
- → I recognize you, I recognize me in you, I value you as worthy of the greatest love, I love you.
- → I love you and you are worthy of it, because I wanted it, by my will you are my son.
- → All evil will turn into ardor in you and you will realize an infinite love, worthy of mine.
- → I am everything and you are mine, worthy of my love and my presence.
- → Your dignity, your nature is divine, it does not change.
- → You are always inside of me, you live in me.
Recurrences in the text
- → My loving nature, my being love, pushes me to create, to a becoming of love.
- → My uniqueness and the dimension of my love, of my choice, need a very efficient opposite of mine to allow a meaningful choice of yours, appropriate to mine.
- → Love is a voluntary choice and a way of knowing.
- → The world seeks to obscure the higher reality of full truth and draws you towards its ever decomposable and temporary emptiness.
- → A time of recollection and solitude strengthens the mind and detaches you from the dust of nothingness.
- → The strength of the world proclaims temporariness, tends to distance you from the truth, to chain you to its conditioning, to make you suffer.
- → If you want you can oppose the world and return to the truth, and in this act you find yourself and a deep understanding for others.
- → The worst trap in your path is considering yourself different and colliding with others to boost your ego.
- → Your being, what you are, is not defined or influenced by the world, by events.
- → Your dignity, your nature is divine, it does not change.
- → I am the infinite thinking spirit, the root, the fullness and the deepest reality of being.
- → Nothing exists outside of me, the out of me does not exist.
- → You are always inside of me, you live in me.
Relative arguments