Amazon.com Widgets
The Linde

Showing only entries tagged with: Love  |  Display all entries

Christian and Islamic visions of love | Katie van Schaijik
Tags: love

On the eve of Valentine’s day I was at Notre Dame University, giving a talk on Catholic (courtship for the annual Edith Stein conference organized by students)—on conjugal love in the Catholic vision, and what it reveals about the nature and vocation of persons. 
It is perhaps my favorite of all topics—the one that has been closest to my heart and most on my mind during the more than 20 years since I discovered philosophy through a course on the nature of love in my junior year in Steubenville.  I’ve been mulling a book on the subject ever since.  And yet, whenever I agree to give a talk, I find myself overwhelmed.  There’s too much to say.  Too much truth and beauty, too much height and depth to contain in a short space of time!  It becomes a kind of ordeal for me.  Then I remember St. Augustine writing of the impossibility of praising God adequately, “And yet woe to me if I do not try!”

One day a year or two ago I found myself participating in a strange debate at a website dedicated to female sexuality in all its permutations.  Another participant wrote in a sort of bored and cynical tone that Catholic and Islamic sexual morality boiled down to the same woman-oppressing thing: virginity until marriage. 

I was taken aback—stunned wordless that anyone could see it that way.  Of course it’s true that both religions demand virginity until marriage and fidelity until death.  But the why and the how are so radically different that I found it hard to believe that anyone could see them as basically the same.  In truth, the two sets of beliefs are almost opposites—in some respects more distant from each other than Christianity is from the secular hedonism that prevails in our culture.

I decided that this theme too should be explored in a book.  I hope to write it someday.  But meanwhile, here is an article that begins to show what I mean.  According to it, in the Islamic view, romantic love is “a disease”, in essential conflict with commitment to Allah.  In Christianity, it is exalted; it is an icon of the Holy Trinity.  In marriage it becomes a Sacrament, a path to holiness, helping achieve the redemption of the world.

Feb 15, 11:48 pm

Add comment

Tocqueville’s definition of individualism | Katie van Schaijik
Tags: individualism, lawler, love, tocqueville

An ISI-sponsored lecture by Berry College professor Peter Augustine Lawler has Alexis de Tocqueville defining individualism as a disease of the heart, involving “the mistaken judgment that love is more trouble than it’s worth.”
That’s very well put, is it not?
Intercollegiate Studies Institute’s free online audio library is a treasure trove.

Aug 10, 12:13 pm

Add comment

Page 1 of 1 pages

Join our mailing list:

  

It is no ordinary matter we are discussing, Glaucon, but the right conduct of life.

Socrates, The Republic

Email the Linde

Interesting series:

Josef Seifert on the nature and importance of freedom:

Are we free? Are we persons?
Why nothing is left of Jewish Christian Faith if we are not free.
But are we free? Five questions.
What Is Freedom? Can We choose Radically Different Lives?
Inner Freedom and Cooperative Freedom
Are we really free? Can we know it?
The first three evidences for human freedom
…  to be continued

John Crosby on the philosophy of John Paul II:

Flying With Both Wings: Why Christians Need Philosophy
Worthy of Respect: The Personalist Norm
Interiority of Human Persons
Persons Are Unrepeatable
Human Freedom
Freedom and Truth
Self-Donation
Embodiment
Embodiment and Morality
10  Solidarity

The Christopher West controversy:

•  The Nightline interview that started it all
•  Alice von Hildebrand's critique
•  David Schindler's critique
•  Fr. Angelo Geiger weighs in
•  A word by West himself
•  Janet Smith's defense
•  Michael Waldstein's defense
•  Schindler responds to Smith and Waldstein
•  Janet Smith's second counter
•  Fr. Angelo Geiger weighs in a 2nd time
•  West's response to the controversy

Find lectures by Healy and West in our downloads section, or listen to specific topics:
- the JPII - Hefner comparison
- prudishness
- concupiscence
- on sexual intimacy as self-revealing

Tags (i.e. topics):

abortionabortion survivalalinskyangeranimal rightsapartheidapprehensionarchbishop chaputauthenticityayn randbenjamin franklinbureaucracyburqacall to lovecare for the soulcaritas in veritatecaryll houselandercentral planningcharitycharles taylorchild brideschild psychologychildrenchristian faithchristmaschristopher caldwellchristopher westcivilitycloningclosed postscoercioncolonialismcommunioncommunismcommunityconcupiscenceconjugal loveconjugal rightsconscienceconscience and super-egoconservatismcourtshipcriticismcrosbycultish tendenciesculturedamien of molokaidavid brooksde lubacdeferencedietrich von hildebranddignity of womendreyfus affairdysfunctionecumenismedith steineducationeinsteinembryonic stem cell researchemotionemotional drynessemptinessenvironmentalismetiquetteexpertisefatherhoodfaultsfoolsforgivenessfrankensteinfreedomfreedom of religionfriendshipfulton sheengeorge weigelgianna jessengift of selfgoofygratitudehans jonashappinesshardwiringhealth carehealyhefnerhugh hefnerhuman rightsideologyillative senseimmigrationincarnationindividualismindividualityinnocenceinstitutional failureintimacyintimidationiranislamjansenismjason berryjohn cagejohn paul iijosef seifertjournalismjust warjusticekierkegaardkoranlawlerlegion of christleon podlesliberalismlonelinesslovemanipulationmao tse tungmark henriemark twainmarriagemarriage debtmartin luther kingmartyrdommary eberstadtmaureen dowdmercymetaphysicsmid-life crisismodernitymodestymohammedmother teresamotivationmovie recommendationsnewmannewman's conversionnfpnon-violencenostalgiaobamaobjectification of womenobjectivity of truthopen discussionoppressionpassivitypaternalismpatrick o'brianpavperfectionpersonpersonal dignitypersonal well-beingpersonalismpersonspersons and powerpet peevephallic symbolspluralismplutopolandpopulation controlpornographypostmodernismpro-lifeprojectionprudishnesspurityrational animalreaganrecommendationsrecordingsrelativismreligionretreatrevelationright to ignorancerights of womenroger scrutonromanticismrome conferenceronald knoxronda chervinsadnesssandro magistersciencescientismself-possessionselfhoodsexsex abusesex abuse scandalsexual moralitysexual revolutionsexualitysheena duncansocialized medicinesolidaritysolitudesteven kellmeyerstevenson

Recent posts:

•  It is not good for man to be alone (7)
•  Resisting the objectification women (3)
•  Von Hildebrand conference in Rome 
•  Karol Wojtyla, great gift to the world 
•  Von Hildebrand conference in Rome 
•  The enemy within 
•  “The emperor’s new clothes” put to music! (5)
•  Sheena Duncan, RIP 
•  Protecting children 
•  Legion of Christ taken to task (2)
•  Religion of Peace? (2)
•  Theological virtues don’t obviate the claims of natural justice 
•  Privacy for animals 
•  Megan McArdle on marriage 
•  Mark Twain on marriage 
•  Husbands, love your wives (3)
•  Splitting the moral atom 
•  Midlife care for the soul 
•  Poland 
•  Personal responsibility or paternalism? 
•  Child brides 
•  Hatred of the Church 
•  Personal encounter with God the center of true faith 
•  Power corrupts 
•  The Dreyfus affair and clerical sex abuse 
•  Recommended reading 
•  Scruton on giving 
•  Penitence 
•  The priority of the personal in human happiness 
•  The personification of evil (3)
•  John Allen on Benedict’s handling of the issue (14)
•  Weigel on the sex scandals in the Church (1)
•  What is criticism? (1)
•  What is conscience? (52)
•  The nanny becomes a bully 
•  Power vs. service 
•  the de-personalizing Legion of Christ (1)
•  Christians in public 
•  Satanism in the Vatican (3)
•  Freedom has to come from within (4)
•  Al Qaida calls for more murder 
•  Intimidation vs. freedom in religion 
•  Son of Hamas fingers Allah as the source of Islamic terror 
•  Josef Seifert calls on PAV President to step down (4)
•  Intimacy without love: an illustration 
•  Bill Buckley on the morality of the last days 
•  Intimacy without love damages the spirit (24)
•  Kleist’s take on modernity (5)
•  Lenten Reading 
•  Christian and Islamic visions of love 
•  Conflating toughness and bullying (1)
•  Ayn Rand’s false philosophy (2)
•  Gift and grateful striving: Personalist Insight of the Day (PID) (2)
•  The curse and the gift of being Irish (2)
•  Defeating corruption 
•  Equality of persons 
•  A must see documentary on person-destroying ideologies 
•  From Pope Benedict 
•  Mugged by the ultrasound (2)
•  The Gospel of Life 
•  Martin Luther King, Jr., personalist 
•  What makes you suffer? 
•  Nancy Pelosi’s Archbishop explains the meaning of freedom 
•  The beginning of love 
•  The moral vacuum in western world makes Islam appealing to women (3)
•  Between the knockers and boosters of modern culture (2)
•  Christmas reading and listening recommendations (1)
•  The Incarnation: the glorification of humanity 
•  A sign of hope 
•  The marriage debt (2)
•  On not wanting reality 
•  Weigel on just war theory 
•  Environmentalism’s assault on persons 
•  Apprehension vs. seeing 
•  Cloning and the right to ignorance (2)
•  Ecclesiastical dysfunction 
•  Criticizing modernity (2)
•  Sexual revolution coming under fire from former liberals 
•  Communion (9)
•  Stigma and motivation 
•  Von Hildebrand on gratitude 
•  The role of philosophy (3)
•  Thanksgiving as an interpersonal act 
•  Personalism in education administration (2)
•  The origins of religion 
•  An anger image 
•  Why a theology of the body? (3)
•  Great movies about life behind the wall (2)
•  The fall of the wall 
•  Continuing the TOB discussion (45)
•  Christopher West breaks silence; answers critics (75)
•  Scientific evidence for the importance of fathers 
•  Why Benedict did what he did 
•  Two views on children 
•  Moral bankruptcy among the elites (1)
•  Recommendation reading and viewing about China under Mao 
•  The big difference between Mother Teresa and Mao Tse Tung (2)
•  Man: the dressing animal (3)
•  Scientistic dogmatism vs. God and human dignity 
•  Remembering two great personalists