Almost all of humanity lives in the world ignoring the absolute, eternity, human nature and illusion of the world.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → Do not look for visible things, which do not last or last for a while.
- → Look for the invisible that lasts forever.
- → What is visible is only visible, not safety, never makes my children happy, because they live a confused and disordered love.
- → The invisible God hides, in hiding works, reveals with love to be sought, recognized and rediscovered.
- → The visible things bring pain, anguish and disappointment.
- → Visual things seduce, disappoint, fascinate, destroy until you lose yours and my identity.
- → The pain of the world makes no sense in the world, it has its perfect meaning beyond the temporary world, in eternal love.
- → The only solution to the contrast between the opposing natures of man and the world is in the awareness of eternal truth.
- → Without me, you lose yourself, the world drags you into its illusion, it robs you of the truth, of your eternal identity.
- → This world is an illusion that cannot satisfy you as much as you want, only in the eternal dimension can you find who you are.
- → If you remember that I am alive, present, eternal and I love you completely, the world can no longer harm you.
- → I can love you everywhere, but love is uncertain in bodies, in sensations, in what is temporary, it is certain in what is eternal.
- → Observe your brothers with my love, as eternal souls, at worst lost in the world, not as bodies, distinguish the eternal and the insubstantial.
- → The world, the body and the mind collaborate in producing the experience of mutability and dragging man into the unawareness of eternity.
- → If you don't face it, the illusion of the world and the body robs you of awareness of you and me, enslaves you and crushes you with pain.
- → Guilt and fragility belong to the world and the body, they do not belong to the divine nature with which you were created.
Relative arguments