charles_hamm wrote:
If it is our understanding of love then there will be by necessity different understandings so why should something that will have multiple understandings be used as the primary criteria for determining moral actions?
I am referring to a specific kind of love: read 1 Corinthians 13.
Kayky:
Love always wants what is best for everyone and everything in any given situation. How can there be a higher standard than that?
That is not true at all. Love is an emotion and as such can lead a person to make rash decisions which are not the right ones at all.
I am not talking about an emotion. Read 1 Corinthians 13.
Kayky:
Every choice we make in life comes from one of three sources: love, ignorance, or fear. Which one do you think is most likely to lead to the most moral choice?
Why in the world does justice or right fall into love? Justice is meant to be blind of all things but truth. A judge does not apply justice out of love. He applies it because the law requires it.
Ambivalence can't be ignorance since if I am ambivalent I know about something, I just don't care.
Love always wants justice. Ambivalence is a fear of caring.
The same can be said for those favor bestiality. As people move closer toward accepting it their true nature would show more.
I can't make heads or tails of what you're saying here.
Kayky:
People use the word love in a variety of ways. I want you to be more aware of the kind of love I am talking about.
If you believe this then you have misapplied the word that Paul used.
Please explain how this is the case.
Whose standard of love do we use then? Mine, yours or someone elses'?
1 Corinthians 13.