NotHardUp1
What? Me? Really?
Conditional is conditional.
Unconditional is unconditional.
Anything in between is fudging.
I do not believe in unconditional love -- not in man, not in the animal kingdom, and not from God.
There is altruism, a selflessness that is an imbalanced and sometimes noble unilateralism. But even it is not necessarily unconditional.
We make choices to love based upon triggers. Those include returned affection, blood relation, and duty, just to name a few.
Animals may bond or imprint on humans, which is fair to call love, but it is by no means unconditional. Give a dog food that it hates, abuse it, or neglect it, and see how unflinching that love is. And, allow the animal a choice as it is raised. Trapping it in a human environment and then claiming it chooses to love when it knows no other existence is a skewed scale tilted in favor of humanity, and indirectly, to animal virtue that mostly doesn't exist.
I have two dogs. I give and receive affection. They respond, but they are no nobler or baser than humans.
As for God, I don't believe he ever claimed to love unconditionally. According to the Hebrews, he spent thousands of years telling them all the things he hates, like mixing wool and cotton, not to mention menstruating women. I fear St. Paul and others after him extrapolated more than a few "truths" about God that simply are not supported by the scriptures.
Like the doctrine of "original sin," unconditional love isn't a direct assertion by God nor by Jesus. It is an extrapolation. Many passages in the Bible speak of love not depending on this or that, or being limited by this or that, and they also go on about God initiating love. All of that can be true without it being unconditional. Men praising their Gods often assign perfection and idealization to the extremes.
I do believe God loves, and love is an enduring attribute of both God and man and even the animals in creation, but not unconditionally. I'm happy to disagree with thousands of years of Jewish and then Christian dogma, as they certainly were wrong about many things.
As this phrase is almost exclusively associated with Christian and Jewish theology in the West, I'd welcome hearing from Muslim, Buddhist, Hindu, Zoroastrian, Wiccan, or other religious views, be they about God's love or man's, as I'm wholly unfamiliar with what parallels there are across the other traditions.
In the end, I think it silly to inflate love into some idealized impossibility that ignores the obvious in human, animal, and religious lights. Great love can be very forgiving, and often is, but it isn't unconditional, just enduring.
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
			Unconditional is unconditional.
Anything in between is fudging.
I do not believe in unconditional love -- not in man, not in the animal kingdom, and not from God.
There is altruism, a selflessness that is an imbalanced and sometimes noble unilateralism. But even it is not necessarily unconditional.
We make choices to love based upon triggers. Those include returned affection, blood relation, and duty, just to name a few.
Animals may bond or imprint on humans, which is fair to call love, but it is by no means unconditional. Give a dog food that it hates, abuse it, or neglect it, and see how unflinching that love is. And, allow the animal a choice as it is raised. Trapping it in a human environment and then claiming it chooses to love when it knows no other existence is a skewed scale tilted in favor of humanity, and indirectly, to animal virtue that mostly doesn't exist.
I have two dogs. I give and receive affection. They respond, but they are no nobler or baser than humans.
As for God, I don't believe he ever claimed to love unconditionally. According to the Hebrews, he spent thousands of years telling them all the things he hates, like mixing wool and cotton, not to mention menstruating women. I fear St. Paul and others after him extrapolated more than a few "truths" about God that simply are not supported by the scriptures.
Like the doctrine of "original sin," unconditional love isn't a direct assertion by God nor by Jesus. It is an extrapolation. Many passages in the Bible speak of love not depending on this or that, or being limited by this or that, and they also go on about God initiating love. All of that can be true without it being unconditional. Men praising their Gods often assign perfection and idealization to the extremes.
I do believe God loves, and love is an enduring attribute of both God and man and even the animals in creation, but not unconditionally. I'm happy to disagree with thousands of years of Jewish and then Christian dogma, as they certainly were wrong about many things.
As this phrase is almost exclusively associated with Christian and Jewish theology in the West, I'd welcome hearing from Muslim, Buddhist, Hindu, Zoroastrian, Wiccan, or other religious views, be they about God's love or man's, as I'm wholly unfamiliar with what parallels there are across the other traditions.
In the end, I think it silly to inflate love into some idealized impossibility that ignores the obvious in human, animal, and religious lights. Great love can be very forgiving, and often is, but it isn't unconditional, just enduring.

