by jimwalton » Thu Apr 28, 2016 12:02 pm
Love, just like peace and justice, exist whether or not people experience them or reciprocate them. Whether or not any particular individual has experienced or reciprocated love, others of their contemporaries have. A triangle as an ideal, as well as abstract and physical examples of triangles, exists even if an individual hasn't seen one.
I agree that the definition of love is somewhat fluid. Even in our society what we mean when we say we love pizza or our favorite movie is not what we mean by it when we say we love a person. And even at that, our love for one person may be different than our love for another. No matter. It doesn't change what we all understand to be the ideal of love, which every culture has.
If we were in ancient Greece, we would know they have four terms for love (in contrast to our one in English). The love shared between a man and his little boy servant may have been eros, but they may have never used "love" for that situation. But they knew what love was. They had storge, philos, and agape to explain the ideals of love.
So when I point to love, my definition aligns well whether one is a Muslim, a Hindu, a Roman or Greek, A Christian, an American, or an aborigine. God is the reference point, and we are designed to be relational creatures, and we all know what love is. Motherhood, romantic love, and true forms of genuine love exist wherever humanity is, as well as abuses of love, lesser forms, and distortions of it. But the distortions don't detract from the ideal that we all know.
> you take the behavior of us as a social species, assert that this behavior comes from a God creator and claim ownership without justification.
It's not without justification at all, nor is it nonsensical. Any trait that exhibits itself across the species regardless of era or location gives evidence that it is a trait beyond any individual or culture, but part of the fabric of what it means to be human. In other words, there is both evidence and justification to assume love, like a sense of right and wrong, is a transcendent characteristic of humans, a necessary relational part of humanity ( a value we all share)—a metaphysical necessity—and therefore something above and beyond each individual person, and even each culture, since all cultures in all eras know and practice love.
> It's also a nonsensical statement because according to your own world view we exist in a fallen sinful imperfect state.
There's nothing nonsensical about it. If we examine the biblical picture, God created us out of a heart of love, and desired that we live in love relationship with him. He invested all humanity with a desire for loving relationship, even between humans (not just between us and God). We are capable of and desire love as part of our nature, even apart from God. We, with our free will, chose to rebel against his love and "fell" into a sinful, imperfect state. In that state God still loves us (Rom. 5.8; Jn. 3.16) and has taken reconciliatory actions to draw us back to a loving relationship with himself. There's nothing nonsensical about it.