F
Fedusenko
Guest
This was a word study that I did a while back and the below quote from another thread made it relevant to post, but in a separate thread.
The three words in Greek that are associated to 'love' actually do not each mean love, only one of them does.
Eros is sex. You won't find that word in the bible. Sex is not love. Sex is simply intercourse, though it can hold a variety of values to those performing the sex. You can have love in sex, but you can also have selfishness, dilusionment, anger, hatred, subversion, coerrsion, ect. Eros is not love.
Phileo as in Philidelphia. As in City of brotherly love, but not quite. Look in Strong's Concordance or another lexicon and you will find that Phileo is how you relate to others, cordial, polite, hospitipal. If you are Phileo towards me you are nice to me. You may love me or you may trick me, but they both fall under Phileo. Note that Phileo is a verb like run. You can run to rescue a kitten from a burning house or you can run with a snatched purse. Phileo is the appearance of love through action which can be genuine or not.
Agape is a noun, not only that, but an abstract noun. It covers not only action, but intention, something that phileo and eros do not. Those words can be used to try to describe love, but they are not love as they are just actions. Agape is the tending of the sheep, the sacrifice, the willing servitude. Agape is for the benefit of the other. Agape is love.
The emotion people call love is just the by-product. Your body creates a hook because you have a vested interest. If you work towards anythings well being, you will develop that attachment.
People complicate things by thinking that love is an emotion at all. It isn't. It is a continual action of service towards another. The phrase, "I don't love you anymore." is not a regression of feelings, but a regression of attentive service.
It seems that most think of LOVE as a emotion rather than a Loving 'OBEDIENT PRINCIPLE'!
---Elijah
The three words in Greek that are associated to 'love' actually do not each mean love, only one of them does.
Eros is sex. You won't find that word in the bible. Sex is not love. Sex is simply intercourse, though it can hold a variety of values to those performing the sex. You can have love in sex, but you can also have selfishness, dilusionment, anger, hatred, subversion, coerrsion, ect. Eros is not love.
Phileo as in Philidelphia. As in City of brotherly love, but not quite. Look in Strong's Concordance or another lexicon and you will find that Phileo is how you relate to others, cordial, polite, hospitipal. If you are Phileo towards me you are nice to me. You may love me or you may trick me, but they both fall under Phileo. Note that Phileo is a verb like run. You can run to rescue a kitten from a burning house or you can run with a snatched purse. Phileo is the appearance of love through action which can be genuine or not.
Agape is a noun, not only that, but an abstract noun. It covers not only action, but intention, something that phileo and eros do not. Those words can be used to try to describe love, but they are not love as they are just actions. Agape is the tending of the sheep, the sacrifice, the willing servitude. Agape is for the benefit of the other. Agape is love.
The emotion people call love is just the by-product. Your body creates a hook because you have a vested interest. If you work towards anythings well being, you will develop that attachment.
People complicate things by thinking that love is an emotion at all. It isn't. It is a continual action of service towards another. The phrase, "I don't love you anymore." is not a regression of feelings, but a regression of attentive service.