@QuickTwist @Fruiteloop
I'm very late to this conversation, but just a quick comment on self love. The two greatest commandments are these from Matthew 22:37-40 -
Jesus replied: “‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’ This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ 40 All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments.”
It's the second commandment that's the one I want to pick up on - Jesus expresses this in a way that is quite interesting. I have come across a number of folks in my many years who have a deep lack of love for themselves and are crippled when it comes to loving others as Jesus commands.
I think the problem is that the word 'love' is over-used in the English language. In this context, self-love is a whole universe away from self-indulgence. Our existence in this world is a loan from God and we don't own our own bodies and souls - the parable of the talents is at the heart of what I mean: we are required to take care of ourselves body, mind and soul in the right way and in the right proportions, and to make a return on what we have been loaned. This seems to me to be what self-love is all about - and it is in the measure that we can do this that we can love others to at least the same degree.
It's best to keep this sort of thing simple because there are some nasty snares that lead away from fulfilling this commandment but which are are dressed up in the clothes of loving others. Some of us are capable of needlessly wrecking our own mental or physical health, or damaging our spirit, by what we think is an act of self-sacrifice for others - it often happens in families or between lovers, so usually where there is a deep relationship. This in my book is morally out of order, particularly in light of that commandment, because you can love no-one and no thing well if you fall over such a cliff - it's easier to do than many think.