I ask you to love everyone as I love.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → My children are fought, struggling in the vanity of confusion, not living in intelligence, living in misery, wandering in places, thoughts that do not exist, that they can not recognize, because every day the world seduces, fascinates them, makes them weak and fragile.
- → Every day their life breaks apart, because they do not want to recognize what is visible and nonexistent.
- → The road to the world was difficult, hard, because my child had not yet known what he had inside from the origin, what was important.
- → My children must recognize the poverty, the misery of the world, which hurts them, look inside themselves, wonder who they are, where they come from, who they belong to, who I am, what our relationship is, look at the world, what surrounds them, they must recognize why they feel weak, fragile, without resources.
Recurrences in the text
- → My children must recognize the poverty, the misery of the world, which hurts them, look inside themselves, wonder who they are, where they come from, who they belong to, who I am, what our relationship is, look at the world, what surrounds them, they must recognize why they feel weak, fragile, without resources.
- → Now the Lord understands this insecurity.
- → I ask you to love everyone as I love.
- → Raise your mind and heart from earthly things to the things of heaven.
- → Love is aware.
- → Man can understand and in his time he will understand well.
- → Man is God, the sooner he understands the less he suffers, he must understand it and he will understand it at the end of the temporal process.
- → When you are not present, other imperfect thoughts invade you.
- → Even pain finds meaning in love and results in a sign of greater truth.
- → In the world there is more truth in pain experienced with love than in well-being.
- → Don't worry, let the unpleasant world fade away.
- → The divine nature is already present in man even before his awareness.
Relative arguments