Amber Samsel: Thoughts on Love and Spirituality (Req. 3) - Blog 7
As we discussed the different Greek terms for "love" last class, I started to wonder which of the loves would represent spirituality. One of our examples from class was the love we feel for a partner is different from the love we feel for a pet, but what kind of love do we feel for faith? As someone who is not that religious, I'm not sure if I have an answer to that, but it did make me wonder about some friends and family I have that are devoted to their God. I do not think their love for their faith would be friendship, because I think friendship is supposed to go both ways. Perhaps they would argue that God loves them back, in which case then perhaps friendship would work. Maybe it is affection? But as mentioned in class, affection has no beginning, so what if they can pinpoint the beginning of when they started believing? In that case, affection couldn't work. Eros? Maybe? Probably not. Even though we did not go over Agape in class, from my own previous knowledge, I bet that would make the most sense for spiritual love. The unconditional means they love no matter what. To me, that seems to be exactly the kind of love that spirituality has, but do we consciously consider our faith to be an act of love? If not, would we start now? Is there something else entirely that constitutes how we feel for our spiritualities?
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