Globe
Meditations, three forms of love:
Eros, Philos, Agape
Victor Perez Centeno, UNCTAD
Several hundreds of years ago in Greece,
Petrus, an old philosopher , was observing
with unusual attention a wedding ceremony in
which an immmense degree of affection was
shared by the couple. “They must love one
another,” he thought aloud.
“Of course they love one another,” said a
man in a dark suit sitting at our table. Have you
ever seen anyone get married for any another
reason?”
But Petrus did not let the question go unanswered:
“What type of love do you mean: Eros, Philos
or Agape?”
The man looked at him without understanding
a word.
“There are three words in Greek to designate
love,” Petrus said. “Today you are seeing the
manifestation of Eros, that sentiment between
two persons.”
The bride and groom smiled for the cameras
and received compliments from the guests.
“The two seem to love one another. In a
short time they will be fighting alone for life,
establishing themselves in a house and taking
part in the same adventure: that’s what makes
love grand and dignified. He will pursue his
career, she probably knows how to cook and
will make an excellent housewife because
since she was a little girl she was brought up to
do that. She will accompany him, they will
have children and they will manage to build
something together, they will be happy for
ever.”
“Al of a sudden, however, this story could
happen the other way around. He is going to
feel that he is not free enough to show all the
Eros, all the love that he has for other women.
She may begin to feel that she has sacrificed a
career and a brilliant life to accompany her husband. So, instead
of creating together,
each of them will feel
robbed in their way of
loving. Eros, the spirit
that joins them, will
start to display only
his bad side. And
what God had meant
to be man’s most
noble sentiment will
begin to be a source of hatred and destruction.”
Petrus looked around himself. Eros was present
in many couples. But he could sense the
presence of Eros the Good and Eros the Evil.
“Notice how odd it is,” he said. “Despite
being good or bad, the face of Eros is never the
same in all persons.”
The band struck up a waltz. People moved to
a small paved area in front of the band-stand to
dance. The alcohol began to show its effect
and they all became merrier and drenched in
sweat. He noticed a girl dressed in blue who
must have been waiting for this wedding just
for the moment of the waltz to arrive because
she wanted to dance with someone she had
dreamed of embracing ever since she entered
adolescence. Her eyes followed the movements
of a young man, well dressed in a light-colored
suit, who was sitting with a bunch of friends.
They were talking away merrily, they had not
noticed that the waltz had started, nor had they
noticed that a few yards away a girl in blue was
staring at one of them.
Petrus thought of small towns, of marriages
with the chosen boy, dreamed of ever since
childhood.
The girl in blue noticed Petrus looking at her
and moved away. And as if the whole movement
had been rehearsed, now it was the boy’s
turn to seek her out with his eyes. Discovering
that she was close to other girls, he went back
to his lively conversation with his friends.
He watched them exchanging glances for a
while and then returned to his glass of wine.
“They act as if it were something shameful to
demonstrate that they love one another,” was
his only remark.
Another girl was staring at him, she must
have been half his age. Petrus raised his glass, made a toast, the girl laughed in embarrassment
and made a gesture pointing towards her
parents almost in apology at not coming closer.
“That’s the beautiful side of love,” he said.
“Love that challenges, love for a stranger who
have come from afar and tomorrow will
already have parted down a road that she too
would like to travel. The love that prefers
adventure.”
Then he continued, pointing to an elderly
couple:
“Look at those two: they haven’t let themselves
be affected by hypocrisy, like so many
others. They look like they are a couple of farm
workers: hunger and need have obliged them
to overcome many a difficulty together. They
have discovered love through work, which is
where Eros shows his most beautiful face, also
known as Philos.”
“What’s Philos?”
“Philos is love in the form of friendship.
When the flame of Eros no longer able to shine,
it’s Philos who keeps couples together.”
“And what about Agape?”
“Agape is total love, the love that devours
those that experience it. Whoever knows and
experiences Agape sees that nothing else in
this world is of any importance, only loving.
This was the love that Jesus felt for humanity,
and it was so great that it shook the stars and
changed the course of man’s history.”
“During the millennia of the history of civilization,
many people have been smitten by this
Love that Devours. They had so much to give –
and the world demanded so little – that they
were obliged to seek out the deserts and isolated
places because love was so great that it
transfigured them. They became the hermit
saints that we know today.”
“For those who have experienced another
form of Agape, this life here may seem hard
and terrible. Yet the Love that Devours makes
everything lose its importance: these men live
only to be consumed by their love.”
Petrus took a pause.
“Agape is the Love that Devours,” he
repeated once more, as if this was the phrase
that best defined that strange type of love.
“Luther King once said that when Christ spoke
of loving our enemies he was referring to
Agape. Because according to him, it was impossible to like our enemies, those who do
us harm and try to make our daily suffering all
the worse.”
“But Agape is a lot more than liking. It is a
sentiment that invades everything, fills all the
cracks and makes any attempt at aggression
turn to dust.”
“There are two forms of Agape. One is isolation,
life dedicated only to contemplation. The
other is precisely the opposite: contact with
other human beings, and enthusiasm, the
sacred sense of work. Enthusiasm means
trance, ecstasy, connecting with God. Enthusiasm
is Agape directed at some idea, something.”
“When we love and believe in something
from the bottom of our soul, we feel stronger
than the world and we are imbued with a
serenity that comes from the certainty that
nothing can conquer our faith. This strange
force makes us always make the right decisions
at the right time, and we are surprised at
our own capacity when we fulfill our objective.”
“Enthusiasm usually manifests itself in all
its power in the early years of our life. We still
have a strong tie with the divinity and we give
ourselves with such zeal to our toys that dolls
take on a life of their own and little tin soldiers
manage to march. When Jesus said that the
kingdom of Heaven belonged to the children,
he was referring to Agape in the form of Enthusiasm.
The children reached him without paying
any attention to his miracles, his wisdom,
the Pharisees and the apostles. They came happily,
driven by Enthusiasm.”
“May you never lose your enthusiasm at any
moment for the rest of your life: it’s your greatest
strength, intent on the final victory. You
cannot let it slip through your fingers just
because as time passes we have to face some
small and necessary defeats.”

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