Lust is all get and love is all give speech with reference to dear departed
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Lust is all Get: Love is all give
'Love' and 'lust' are diametrically opposite to each other. The former is a virtue, whereas the latter is a vice. Love believes in giving; lust is always ready to receive. Love can sacrifice its own pleasure for noble purposes. Lust is just bothered about its own pleasures. Ultimately, it is love that wins, and lust is doomed to suffer, repent and regret over its own deeds.
Someone has very poetically said, 'It is in loving, not being loved
The heart finds its quest;
It is in giving, not in getting
Our lives are blest.'
Selfless love is the divinest sentiment humans have. It is the only emotion that makes him a god. Selfless love is the quality of the angels. We can say people who have evolved to the highest level of existence, become selfless lovers.
There are many examples in history that prove the premise. Jesus Christ, the Messiah, is the divinest example of selfless love. His entire life is an epitome of selfless love in practice. He taught mankind how to love selflessly. We saw the culmination of his selfless love in his suffering inflicted upon him by the then Pharisees and religious authorities. On the cross, when he was being nailed, he prayed to God to forgive them. He loved mankind selflessly; and he did not flinch from suffering.
All great lovers of mankind have been givers, and they also gave everything they had to make this world a better place. Mother Teresa, Florence Nightingale, and many more who worked to preserve peace in the world are selfless lovers of mankind.
Lustful people, on the other hand are always conspiring to get as much as they can get. The present hellish condition of our planet, environment, resources, lopsided distribution of world's wealth, etc, is because of the lust of people. Stanley Houghton has beautifully portrayed this evil of lust in his play, Dear Departed through the characters of greedy Slaters and Jordans.
'Love' and 'lust' are diametrically opposite to each other. The former is a virtue, whereas the latter is a vice. Love believes in giving; lust is always ready to receive. Love can sacrifice its own pleasure for noble purposes. Lust is just bothered about its own pleasures. Ultimately, it is love that wins, and lust is doomed to suffer, repent and regret over its own deeds.
Someone has very poetically said, 'It is in loving, not being loved
The heart finds its quest;
It is in giving, not in getting
Our lives are blest.'
Selfless love is the divinest sentiment humans have. It is the only emotion that makes him a god. Selfless love is the quality of the angels. We can say people who have evolved to the highest level of existence, become selfless lovers.
There are many examples in history that prove the premise. Jesus Christ, the Messiah, is the divinest example of selfless love. His entire life is an epitome of selfless love in practice. He taught mankind how to love selflessly. We saw the culmination of his selfless love in his suffering inflicted upon him by the then Pharisees and religious authorities. On the cross, when he was being nailed, he prayed to God to forgive them. He loved mankind selflessly; and he did not flinch from suffering.
All great lovers of mankind have been givers, and they also gave everything they had to make this world a better place. Mother Teresa, Florence Nightingale, and many more who worked to preserve peace in the world are selfless lovers of mankind.
Lustful people, on the other hand are always conspiring to get as much as they can get. The present hellish condition of our planet, environment, resources, lopsided distribution of world's wealth, etc, is because of the lust of people. Stanley Houghton has beautifully portrayed this evil of lust in his play, Dear Departed through the characters of greedy Slaters and Jordans.
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