Valentine’s Day Is Over NOW… What Is Love, Really?
The question “What is Love?” has been pondered over for as long as we have had a word to represent it. It has been tackled by some of the deepest minds to have graced this planet with their presence, and yet with all that wisdom at the end of our fingertips, we seem to be further from a good answer to that question than we ever have been.
We use it to describe the relationship between parents and children, intimate partners, our shiny new gadgets from cell phones to cars, our favorite dessert, and our connection to every other living being in our world. Are any of those uses wrong? Well, that depends on our definition of love.
The spread of uses is vast, from something that gives us a moment of pleasure to the deepest strongest connection a human being can experience. The most common dictionary definition of love goes something like this: “Love is a strong feeling of affection.” That certainly explains how we may experience it while at the same time commits a deep error of oversimplification. Does it actually tell us what love is?
Wikipedia states, “The conventional view in biology is that there are three major drives in love—sex drive, attachment, and partner preference. The primary neurochemicals (neurotransmitters, sex hormones, and neuropeptides) that govern these drives are testosterone, estrogen, dopamine, oxytocin, and vasopressin.”
That just about takes all the special meaning out of the word love. Reduced to neurochemicals, it becomes no more than a feature of this flesh we seem to inhabit. That scientific, biological definition may all be true, but does it help us understand love any better? What about Lyrics to Tina Turner’s song “What’s Love”?
You must understand though the touch of your hand
Makes my pulse react
That it’s only the thrill of boy meeting girl
Opposites attract
What’s love got to do, got to do with it
What’s love but a second hand emotion?
What’s love got to do, got to do with it
Who needs a heart when a heart can be broken?
Accuracy does not equal validity. We can analyze a baby to the very atom that make up its cells but that doesn’t tell us how we should parent our child.
In the West, the historical foundations of our understanding of love come first from the Ancient Greek philosophers who identified four forms of love: familial love (storge), friendly love (philia), romantic love (eros), and divine love (agape).
When we refer to agape love, Jesus who brought love to the world in a language that was accessible to all. He was asked the question by the scribes…
“Which is the greatest commandment of all”?
And thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy strength: this is the first commandment. And the second is like, namely this, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. There is none other commandment greater than these. Mark 12:29-31
Jesus said, “Greater love hath no man than this that a man lay down his life for his friends.” John 15:13
When we are able to embrace this message in these words our world will begin to look very different than it does today. Something to think about…
Perhaps the whole idea of “thinking about what love is” leads us off course, and trying to define it in words or seeking “it” takes us further from a the opportunity to experience it. When we feel love we know it in our hearts.
If the meaning of life is to find the meaning of life, likewise love is clearly not a bunch of words put into a sentence. It can only be found through the inquiry into uncovering what is already there ready for us to share and experience. Give it a try. |