This need of love drives my children to look into the confusion and disorder of the world.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → Looking at you is the image of true, free love, without obstacles or uncertainties, which overcomes all boundaries and barriers to love.
- → Seek freely, joyfully and truthfully.
- → Then you will be free, children who love me, recognize me and my love.
- → The importance of being children is this strong union which makes you free, this harmony and complete relationship of love between me and you.
- → You will be free to think, love, know, seek, and find.
- → His children are not slaves, they are free and children in the love of their father.
- → Love makes you walk freely, in intelligence, eternity, harmony and light.
- → My creation is not to be confused with other vain, nonexistent creations, work of a vain, illusory, unsure, uncertain world, that makes my children unconscious of the origin.
- → If your actions push you towards confusion, towards incoherent attitudes, act more strongly in me, with love, recognize me, always recognize that every thought of yours, every sick act of yours is illusory, vain, improbable.
- → 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.
Relative arguments