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Easton's Bible Dictionary

 

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Love
        This word seems to require explanation only in the case of its
        use by our Lord in his interview with "Simon, the son of Jonas,"
        after his resurrection (John 21:16, 17). When our Lord says,
        "Lovest thou me?" he uses the Greek word _agapas_; and when
        Simon answers, he uses the Greek word _philo_, i.e., "I love."
        This is the usage in the first and second questions put by our
        Lord; but in the third our Lord uses Simon's word. The
        distinction between these two Greek words is thus fitly
        described by Trench:, "_Agapan_ has more of judgment and
        deliberate choice; _philein_ has more of attachment and peculiar
        personal affection. Thus the 'Lovest thou' (Gr. agapas) on the
        lips of the Lord seems to Peter at this moment too cold a word,
        as though his Lord were keeping him at a distance, or at least
        not inviting him to draw near, as in the passionate yearning of
        his heart he desired now to do. Therefore he puts by the word
        and substitutes his own stronger 'I love' (Gr. philo) in its
        room. A second time he does the same. And now he has conquered;
        for when the Lord demands a third time whether he loves him, he
        does it in the word which alone will satisfy Peter ('Lovest
        thou,' Gr. phileis), which alone claims from him that personal
        attachment and affection with which indeed he knows that his
        heart is full."
        In 1 Cor. 13 the apostle sets forth the excellency of love, as
        the word "charity" there is rendered in the Revised Version.
Bibliography Information
Easton, Matthew George. M.A., D.D., "Biblical Meaning for 'Love' Eastons Bible Dictionary".
bible-history.com - Eastons; 1897.

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