You’ve probably seen the slogan “love is love” (or a variation of it) on a T-shirt, bumper sticker, or poster, or in an advertisement or social media post by a corporate giant like Facebook, Coke, Vans, or Nordstrom.
On its face, it sounds to many like an undeniable axiom. Who would be so backward as to try to put limitations on love? Corporations that remind us of this maxim take on the air of moral teachers. How could we feel comfortable purchasing a product unless we know that its maker is on the right side of history?
Rather than the self-centered love that comes naturally to the aesthete, biblical love is other-centered.
But since “love is love” is so prevalent and so well captures some of the
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