generating a return on principle
Primary
  • News
  • Daily Mass Readings
  • Faith at Work
    • Catholic Business Profiles
    • Conferences & Events
    • History
    • Obituaries
    • Prayer Requests
    • Saints at Work
    • Travel & Pilgrimages
    • About Faith & Work
  • Life & Liberty
    • CSR: Catholic Social Responsibility
      • Family & Society
      • Life Issues
      • End of Life Issues
      • Stewardship
      • Work, Profit & Property
    • Freedom
      • Religious Freedom
  • Money & Ethics
    • About Money & Ethics
    • Financial Services
      • Accounting & Taxes
      • Banking
      • Debt Solutions
      • Lending
      • Wealth Management
    • Investing
  • Voices
    • Bishops’ Corner
    • Columns
      • David G. Bjornstrom
      • Fr. George Rutler
      • Gregory Weiler, Esq.
      • Ken Lambert
      • Thomas Carroll, CFA
      • Thomas M. Loarie
      • Tim Busch
      • Tim Von Dohlen
  • This Week in History
  • Business Directory
  • Radio Programs & Podcasts
    • The Mentors Radio
  • Guest
    • Your Business Listings
    • My Account
  • Login
  • Add a Business Listing
  • Advertise
 
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • News
  • Daily Mass Readings
  • Faith at Work
    • Catholic Business Profiles
    • Conferences & Events
    • History
    • Obituaries
    • Prayer Requests
    • Saints at Work
    • Travel & Pilgrimages
    • About Faith & Work
  • Life & Liberty
    • CSR: Catholic Social Responsibility
      • Family & Society
      • Life Issues
      • End of Life Issues
      • Stewardship
      • Work, Profit & Property
    • Freedom
      • Religious Freedom
  • Money & Ethics
    • About Money & Ethics
    • Financial Services
      • Accounting & Taxes
      • Banking
      • Debt Solutions
      • Lending
      • Wealth Management
    • Investing
  • Voices
    • Bishops’ Corner
    • Columns
      • David G. Bjornstrom
      • Fr. George Rutler
      • Gregory Weiler, Esq.
      • Ken Lambert
      • Thomas Carroll, CFA
      • Thomas M. Loarie
      • Tim Busch
      • Tim Von Dohlen
  • This Week in History
  • Business Directory
  • Radio Programs & Podcasts
    • The Mentors Radio

By Editors

Bring Back Love, Transform Culture

May 10, 2016

As America continues to become more me-centered, utility focused, and organized around the needs of the self, we are losing one of the most important and essential elements required to sustain a rich and vibrant country that nurtures and enriches its members. We should appreciate the fact we’ve created a technologically-driven society capable of remarkable achievements. But we should mourn the fact that we’re becoming a culture bereft of love in all its forms. America is paying a price for squelching love’s desire, ignoring love’s poverty and denying love’s ambition.

Ancient writings rely on three distinct words for love, each with a different meaning. The three words are the Greek words éros, agape, and philia.

Éros refers to “intimate love.” Plato wrote that although éros is an attraction initially felt for a person, and usually in a more physical sense, with proper contemplation it evolves into an appreciation of the beauty within that person. It might even become a deeper appreciation of beauty itself. The idea is that sensually-based love aspires to evolve to a spiritual plane of existence. Thought of this way then, the highest level of love between two people is transcendence – wholeness or perfection that resembles a state of special grace.

Traditionally transcendence between two people has resulted éros from a successful marriage. Because fewer people are marrying and staying married, fewer people experience transcendent love. One night hook-ups and “relationships with benefits” are no substitute for inspiring love’s greatest desires or ambitions.

Agape refers to brotherly love, or charitable love. Thomas Aquinas wrote that Agape love is “to will the good of another.” Willing the good of others is not the same as pleasing them with kindness.

Philia generally means “affectionate regard, or friendship, and it usually means “between equals.”  It is also expressed variously as loyalty to friends, family, and community.  It is a more general type of love. Patriotism could be a form of Philia.

Today we can find only pockets of agape or philia scattered throughout our culture. Neither can be considered to comprise the woof and the warp of our culture like they did in times past. Many churches and charitable organizations exemplify agape in its highest form. Although scattered families and groups experience philia, agape is rare as people jockey for position at the supermarket checkout line, struggle to change lanes in heavy traffic, or pursue most everyday activities.  Likewise philia is increasingly pushed aside by higher divorce rates that strain family bonds, declining emphasis on fraternal organizations, and parents teaching selfishness rather than team performance at youth activities.

The most important role love can play for us in all its forms is to propel us outside ourselves.

Although love’s desire emerges from within each person, love is not self-centered. A proper response to love’s poverty is a desire for true love on every level. The fulfillment of that love will shatter both selfishness and self-centeredness. But most important, if shared by all Americans it will make us great people and our nation a great nation.

The most meaningful accomplishments are inspired by and emanate from love. Achievements driven by love’s ambition weigh most in determining each generation’s legacy and defining its impact on the world. Works done without love are dead works. Goals accomplished without love are lifeless goals.

If our generation hopes to achieve our full potential and America’s full potential as a nation, and magnificently serve humankind to a significant degree during this century then we must once again instill the spirit of love in all its forms in every citizen. We must learn to love again. 

————————-

Dick Lyles is a U.S. Navy veteran, author and co-author of more than 10 books, some of which have become best-sellers, a sought-after management and leadership expert, popular radio host of Catholic Business Journal’s LIVE radio program: Dick Lyles on Business, Career and Work, and CEO of Origin Entertainment in Hollywood. Read a more robust bio here. (http://catholicbusinessjournal.biz/page_id/8). Dick Lyles may be reached at Dick@CatholicBusinessJournal.biz

MORE »

2nd Sidebar

Daily Mass Readings

Good Friday of the Lord's Passion
Daily Mass Readings »

Recent Columns

Book Review: The Hard Truth about Job Hunting in the AI Era

By admin
Thomas M. Loarie

Love – How Many of Us Can Truly Grasp What It Means?

By Thomas M. Loarie
Tim Von Dohlen

Finding Ways to Help Get Through the Eye of the Needle

By Tim Von Dohlen

Bishop’s Corner

Retiring New York Cardinal Dolan says he’s a ‘spiritual granddad’ now

EWTNnews—New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan, who recently retired from his...

Seattle, Boston archbishops make friendly wager ahead of 2026 Super Bowl

EWTN News—It’s become an annual tradition for the Catholic bishops...

SAINTS AT WORK: Pope Leo XIV recalls the ‘life and witness’ of St. Augustine on his feast day

CNA—Pope Leo XIV recalled what the “life and witness” of...

Latest Faith at Work News

Book Review: The Hard Truth about Job Hunting in the AI Era

Innovation: How the Formula 1 pit stop has saved thousands of babies

Vic Gundotra: Former Google exec spoke about AI, Bible, conversion at Catholic business summit

Love – How Many of Us Can Truly Grasp What It Means?

Catholic activist Jimmy Lai sentenced to 20 years in prison in Hong Kong national security trial

Latest Money & Ethics News

Book Review: The Hard Truth about Job Hunting in the AI Era

Vic Gundotra: Former Google exec spoke about AI, Bible, conversion at Catholic business summit

Finding Ways to Help Get Through the Eye of the Needle

The Cignetti Effect: Why the “Long Game” Wins in a World of Instant Gratification

Good versus Evil

Featured Business Listing

Anchor Point Capital

Download Free Reports

  • Free Report – “Money & Ethics”

Browse Topics

  • Faith at Work
  • Money & Ethics
  • Radio Programs & Podcasts

More Great Articles

Are You the Author of Your Life?

Joe Biden signs Executive Order to Force you and I to pay for travel expenses to Kill the Most Vulnerable: Unborn infants

Intelligent Life and Darwin’s Lesser Known Colleague

Are we Really More Intelligent than Other Eras?

Decline in Olympic Viewership

The Power of Listening

Beware Demagoguery in Unexpected Places and Persons

It’s About Fear, It’s About Money, It’s About Death – It’s NOT About Dignity

Savor Opportunities

Even More Great Articles

Finding Ways to Help Get Through the Eye of the Needle

BOOK REVIEW: Discovering the Rosary of the Seven Sorrows: A Gift from Our Lady of Kibeho

THREE POPES—Benedict XVI, Francis, and Leo XIV—recommend this book, which warns of a world without God

Who is Robert Hugh Benson, author of “Lord of the World”?

BOOK REVIEW: The Church Needs Wounded Healers

A Jubilee of Hope spiritual reading list on Christian hope

BOOK and Saint: Saint Claude de la Colombiere and His Little, Life-Changing Book

FOR MORE ARTICLES ON "FAITH AT WORK" CLICK HERE


FOR MORE ARTICLES ON "MONEY AND ETHICS" CLICK HERE

Visit our sponsor:

Your ad here!
  • Manage Account
  • News
  • Contact Us
  • My Listings
  • New Post
  • Author Index
  • Keyword Index
  • Advertise
  • Free Reports
  • Press Releases
  • Disclaimer
  • Pricing Package (Business Directory)
  • United States
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn



Copyright 2020 © Catholic Business Journal

Login


Lost your password?

Sign up for Catholic Business Journal

A password will be sent to your email address.


Your personal data will be used to support your experience throughout this website, to manage access to your account, and for other purposes described in our Private Policy (https://www.catholicbusinessjournal.com/private-policy/).