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  1. 28 lip 2023 · The Hebrew word for love is ahavah, which is rooted in the more molecular word hav,1 which means to give, revealing that, according to Judaism, giving is at the root of love. What does this etymological insight teach us both about the function of love and about how love functions?

  2. Ahavah (ah-hah-VAH) אהבה. This is the Hebrew noun for “love.” The Torah speaks extensively about love: Ahavah of Isaac toward his wayward son, Esau; ahavah of Jacob toward his wife Rachel; ahavah between G‑d and His people; ahavah we are to have for each other; and ahavah we are enjoined to extend to “strangers” . Explore ahavah. 7.

  3. 20 lip 2017 · Explore the ways the biblical authors used the word love, and how they depicted God as the ultimate source and goal of all human love.

  4. 1 lip 2024 · We have all heard of the three words in Greek for love, which are phileo, agape, and eros. Phileo is often defined as brotherly love, agape is an unconditional love and eros is an erotic love. Hebrew actually has four words for love. English has just one word for love – love.

  5. 1 lip 2015 · His words to “love our enemies” seem to be synonymous with the next phrase, “do good towards those who hate you ” — treat them fairly, don’t act in revenge, be kind no matter how unkind they are to you.

  6. When ahavah is used in the context of married love, it does not express the uncomplicated Jewish ideal of marital love but only connotes a comparison—the loved one as opposed to the "hated" one, or a new love replacing an old love.

  7. 15 paź 2017 · In the Book of Jeremiah YHWH said: “ I have loved you [a’hav’tik] with an everlasting love [w-a’havat olam]; Therefore I have drawn you with lovingkindness.” (Jeremiah 31:3) God’s love was everlasting, implying that God’s heart was, and is, perfect, whole, and complete.

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