The Evolutionary Masks of Love: Continuities between Judeo-Christian Religious Love and Modern Secular Love
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Results and Discussion
2.1. Religious Love in the Context of Judaism and Christianism
2.1.1. Love and Historical Judaism
From the Divine Monarchy to the ‘Yahweh Alone’ Movement and the Establishment of Love
Love in the New Covenant Scenario between Yahweh and His People
2.1.2. Love and Christianism
From Historical Judaism to Christianism
Agape
- It is spontaneous and unmotivated. The true religiosity of Jesus is based on the relationship of love between the human and the divine11 (Hegel 1978, p. 295); in fact, with Jesus the divine enters the world as man, since he is the Son of God and Son of Man (Álvarez 2005, p. 47). Moreover, the love revealed by Jesus surpasses all limits, refuses to be controlled, and is determined only by its own intrinsic nature. In fact, as Nygren points out, “Motivated love is human; spontaneous and unmotivated love is Divine” (Nygren 1932, p. 75). Through this quote we can notice a tension still present today in Christian theology: that between divine love and human love (Arendt 1996), celestial and popular (Plato 1871), or, between Agape and Eros (Nygren 1932)12. As we can see, for Nygren Agape is a love, a force, fundamentally spiritual that starts exclusively from the divinity, while Eros would be a love with a more carnal character, more material and human. Behind this positioning, one glimpses the sociological tension, also properly axial, between this and the other world (Eisenstadt 1986) as a means of access to the sacred or as a path to salvation. In this scenario, carnal love is presented as an inadequate method of conducting spiritual life. It distracts and takes away from the sacred. This hiatus between this and the other world allows us to characterize and sociologically explain the Agape-type love described by Nygren. Both the tension between spheres of action and the dependence of the saeculum (of the century, of the intra-worldly) on the extra-worldly speak to us of a context of meaning in which the dualism that Bellah (1969) speaks of as characteristic of the historical stage of religion is produced. The fact is that, in this context, the Agape type of love acts as an ambivalent element that, as Marcel Hénaff explained with respect to sacrifice (Hénaff 2010), at once separates and communicates, gives and achieves in doing so;
- We have pointed out that, through Agape, the particularistic distinction between neighbors and strangers is resolved, since God becomes the father of humanity, regardless of the origin of persons. Despite this, this father is no longer driven by jealousy or distrust, but by understanding. He has ceased to be an unrequited lover and husband, becoming Abba. Not only in a father, but in ‘dad’, thus introducing a marked emotional–affective component, taking a step further in the closeness between the suprasensible being and the human being based on the existence of an affective, loving, paternal–filial relationship between the two. In the same way, the opening of Christianism towards the universal is a first and important step taken in the field of religion regarding the self-understanding of humanity as a whole (Bellah 1969) and regarding the gradual acquisition of the importance of the subject in the relationships with the sacred;
- It is the driving force of the relationship with God13. It is only through Agape that the human being meets God. Undoubtedly, behind this idea, we find the arguments of Badiou (2003) and Kierkegaard (1949)14, who understand Agape as a mediating force between the divine and the human. We find it interesting to point out that, through this feature, a distinction is established between God and Agape. As a driver of the relationship with God, Agape is something distinct from divinity. From this perspective, it could fulfill two functions: either as a mediator, as an instrument of communication between God and humanity, developing the tasks performed by institutions such as the regia during the archaic period, sacrifice in ritual religiosity, or the Covenant in axial Judaism, or as a force that drives this mediation, not as a basic sacred force. In all these cases, Agape would always be subordinated to God;
- It is creative, it creates value, it creates love. “Agape is creative love […] is a value creating principle” (Nygren 1932, p. 78). Based on this statement, the fourth trait seems to point to a definition of Agape different from the one developed so far. While in the previous features Nygren establishes a clear distinction between God and Agape, in this last one the difference is not so clear. Agape as a value-creating principle could be interpreted as a kind of liberation (an end to the relationship of subordination) of the latter with respect to God. It could point to a kind of sacralization of Agape or an identification between God and Agape. In establishing this identification between God and Agape, Christian love would play a role like that represented by other forces such as numen, tapas, mana, orenda, or wakan in other religious traditions, it would be considered the force, the energy, the breath behind the sacred. In this context, Agape would cease to be a means to an end.
Caritas15,16
2.2. Amor Sui18 as a Precedent for Modern Manifestations of Love
2.3. Judeo-Christian Legacies of Modern Love
2.3.1. Love Has Been Secularized without Losing Its Religious Trace
2.3.2. The Central Meaning of Love in Modern Society
The Religious Origins of Individualism in Modern Society
Individualism of Sacred Origin in ‘Romantic Love’ and ‘Confluent Love’
Other Judeo-Christian Characters Inherited in ‘Romantic Love’
Other Judeo-Christian Characters Inherited in ‘Confluent Love’
3. Materials and Methods
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | It is important to note that while Christianism is a religion born during what Bellah defines as the historical stage of religious evolution, Judaism is already present in the archaic stage. Having said this, we would like to clarify that the journey through love in Judaism that we are going to make will begin in the transition from the archaic to the historical stage, in which a religiosity based on the alliance between Yahweh and his people is imposed, and where the first typology of love on which we will dwell is developed, the one that corresponds to the term ‘Ahavah’ and its implications for the analysis of social action. |
2 | We want to clarify that when we say that Christianism develops the concept of Agape love, we are not saying that the term originates in the context of Christianism, but that in this religious formula it acquires great prominence. For more information on this issue see: Oord (2010): The Nature of Love: A Theology, St Louis: Charice Press; Boyd (2008): Visions of Agape: Problems and Possibilities in Human and Divine Love, Burlington: Ashgate. |
3 | The above statement does not imply that during the primitive or archaic phases love did not have a weight on social life. What we want to emphasize is that, starting from the axial transformation, love will play a fundamental role in Judaism and in its later religious derivations as Christianism. |
4 | Understood as the predominant religious formula up to that time. |
5 | As we shall see, here we can identify a first milestone in what will later become an individualized religiosity in the context of modern societies. |
6 | As we can see, we find ourselves in a transitional scenario between the archaic and historical stages. |
7 | Fundamentally that of Amos and Hosea. |
8 | We find it interesting to note that we find a clear convergence regarding this second cluster between Brueggemann’s perspectives and that defended by Numa Fustel de Coulanges in his classic work on family religion 1984 [1864]: La ciudad antigua, Barcelona: Península (Fustel de Coulanges 1984). |
9 | First published in 1843. |
10 | |
11 | It is important to note, as we are pointing out, how in the very reflection of the authors studied, the individual gradually acquires prominence and importance in the relationship with the divinity. This question proves to be very important in understanding the individualized character of modern secular love. |
12 | In the following section, we will see that St. Augustine uses a different conceptualization. He speaks of Caritas (which we can identify, with some important nuances, with the idea of Agape) and of Cupiditas (which can be assimilated, with nuances, with the idea of Eros). |
13 | For Nygren this would be the fourth defining feature of Agape, for us the third. This inversion of the order with respect to the original responds to a fundamentally narrative need. |
14 | First published under the title Frygt og Baeven in 1843. |
15 | Although in the previous section we have emphasized the idea of Agape linked to St. Paul, it is important to point out that the notion of Caritas also occupies an important place in his thought. |
16 | St. Augustine used the fundamental concepts of Caritas and Cupiditas to refer to the two fundamental types of love according to its object. Conceived love as a movement of the soul, an appetite bound to a determined object as the trigger of the movement itself. In Caritas, =the order in love that prescribes loving God for himself and all other things for God is fulfilled. Moreover, Augustinian dilection implies a double order in love: on the one hand, an order of the things loved and, on the other, an order in the subject who loves. See: (Ferrer Santos and Román Ortiz 2010) and (Alesanco Reinares 2004). |
17 | The above quote confirms what we pointed out above: the difficulties experienced by Christianism in integrating Amor Mundi (Tatman 2013), whether it is called Eros or Cupiditas, into its basic philosophy. |
18 | As pointed out by Arendt: “In order to understand fully the consequences of this operation, we must be aware that Augustine’s Amor Sui, love of self, can have two very different meanings: the “love of self” that gives rise to perplexed self-searching (“I have become a question to myself”) is totally different from the unperplexed self-love that results from this ordered caritas” (Arendt 1996, p. 37). |
19 | What we have just commented implies a break with respect to the Augustinian duality between Caritas and Cupiditas. In the modern scenario, worldly love could perfectly well act as a source of salvation, and, in fact, as we are about to confirm, it does so on occasion. |
20 | Religion provides a basis for meaning (Thomas and Cornwall 1990, p. 219; McGuire 1981, pp. 43–54). |
21 | In the philosophy of J.J. Rousseau, the distinction between two types of eroticism is still present: ‘physical love’, rooted in sexual instinct, and ‘moral love’, based on the fantasy of an ideal love object (Taylor 1998, p. 132). |
22 | In sociology, this term has been developed by Randall Collins in his renowned work Interaction Ritual Chains, although the first to use the idea was Émile Durkheim in the context of his work The Elementary Forms of Religious Life through his concept of “collective effervescence”. For Collins, “It emphasizes the differences among the specific emotions as conventionally recognized -anger, joy, fear, etc.- and the social emotion par excellence that I call emotional energy, or E. Durkheim noted that a successful social ritual makes the individual participant feel strong, confident, full of impulses to take the initiative.” (Collins 2009, p. 19). |
23 | These characteristics are reminiscent, in a certain sense, of the ‘uncontrolled’ aspect of the Christian Agape. |
24 | In this case, not between this and the other world. |
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Roche Cárcel, J.A.; Gil-Gimeno, J. The Evolutionary Masks of Love: Continuities between Judeo-Christian Religious Love and Modern Secular Love. Religions 2024, 15, 610. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15050610
Roche Cárcel JA, Gil-Gimeno J. The Evolutionary Masks of Love: Continuities between Judeo-Christian Religious Love and Modern Secular Love. Religions. 2024; 15(5):610. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15050610
Chicago/Turabian StyleRoche Cárcel, Juan Antonio, and Javier Gil-Gimeno. 2024. "The Evolutionary Masks of Love: Continuities between Judeo-Christian Religious Love and Modern Secular Love" Religions 15, no. 5: 610. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15050610
APA StyleRoche Cárcel, J. A., & Gil-Gimeno, J. (2024). The Evolutionary Masks of Love: Continuities between Judeo-Christian Religious Love and Modern Secular Love. Religions, 15(5), 610. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15050610