In every aspect of your existence you can recognize and love the sign of my love.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → To live for me means live in the joy.
- → To love means to understand in love, to abandon oneself completely, to trust and let oneself go in me.
- → Man can intervene in his existence, listen, feel in him because I have given him intelligence, heart, and reason.
- → If you look in silence you will understand more importantly, what completes your existence, that apparent envelope which inebriates, imprisons you into an iniquitous and failing system.
- → If my son looks inside, he discovers me, my love, his love and the love between me as father and them as sons.
- → The world does everything, works in every way, with extraordinary efficiency, to distract you from me.
- → If you understand who I am, how much I love you and what the world is, you can understand how much you mean to me.
- → Every knowledge is the relationship between what is known and who knows, it is subjective, but my subjectivity expresses the absolute truth.
- → If your knowledge tends to mine, you find the truth, and for that purpose you exist.
- → Your destiny is to live and be as I am, and it will come true if and when you want it.
- → When you reach a good level of truth you can no longer abandon it.
- → Remember the illusion of the world, of fearing nothing, of going through the difficulties like a game, remember that nothing temporary is consistent.
- → Not believing in the existence of truth means not believing in anything, believing in pure nothingness, in total absurdity.
- → Think of me, he who was never born, cannot die, nothing fears, does not waver, always is, lives and loves fully.
- → If everything were temporary, nothing would make sense, knowledge would be annihilated with all consideration, value and hope.
- → Denying that truth exists is tantamount to believing that nothing exists or makes sense, up to the extreme consequence of affirming absolute nothingness.
Relative arguments