Gabe Snyder Blog 5 - Julian of Norwich (Reading for the class)
One of the most interesting things I've learned throughout the course of this class was how the word "love" is a very broad term in English and can be translated into multiple words in several other languages. St. Julian of Norwich describes a unique type of love: the love between the Divine Creator and its Creation. We wouldn't say "I love you" to God the same way we'd say "I love you" to a significant other, no? We don't mean the same thing when we tell our parents we love them and when we say we love a certain kind of food. The love of and from God is one that is somehow more abstract and philosophical than the already abstract ideas of "love" that we have. The love from God is something that many people, especially those with religious upbringings, are told we intrinsically have, and the love for God is something that we give through prayer and faith. While there are parallels between this and, say parent-child love, how do we describe the love a Creator? Is it omnipresent? Is it always with us?
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