Man is destined to love God and is able to do so in spite of any difficulty level.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → Man is destined to love God and is able to do so in spite of any difficulty level.
- → This world offers man the possibility of making the opposite choice to God, of denying, rejecting God and experiencing its consequences.
- → The choice explores the possibilities of adhering to the truth or being prisoners of illusion.
- → Choose eternal life and leave the world to those who love lies.
- → You and the world have only a brief experience in common.
- → This path leads man to his real fullness, to minimize the world and any harmful conditioning.
- → The mind tends to tell stories, interpretations of the past or any future possibilities, pleasant or unpleasant, fearful or desirable, linked to temporality, to the unawareness of eternity.
- → Do not fear the difficulties of the world, live them with confidence and prudence.
- → If you go beyond the world you find me, our love, yourself, you can see the game of the world and smile at it.
- → If you see the game of the world, you win it, otherwise you're a slave to it and you suffer.
- → To be able to see the world for what it is, it is necessary to know eternity and to look at temporariness from a position that transcends it.
- → Those who know love do not confuse it with the desire to command.
- → The voice of the world denies me completely or simulates being me.
- → If the mind generalizes the voice of the world, it says that everything is temporary.
- → To believe it is necessary to believe that there is truth, a reality that is always true, eternal.
- → Your journey in the world is a temporary game, you are the son of the Most High, do not fear the world, do not worship it and do not submit to it.
- → Infinite love is also in bodies, but certainly beyond bodies, even in sensations, but certainly beyond sensations, even in temporariness, but certainly beyond temporariness.
Relative arguments