That would be the Good Samaritan kind of love.
I have no problem with that at all, bearing in mind that the Samaritan in question wasn't a follower of Jesus, and that similar ideas have been and are part of all sorts of religious traditions. I do think however that, in general terms, the closer the object of that love is to the individual the more that love will manifest itself.
I don’t quite know what this God you don’t believe exists is like.
As Alan was originally talking about God's love being 'unconditional', and the following posts followed on from that premise, I would have thought it was rather obvious I was talking about the Christian God.
Most who don’t believe are agnostic about God but certain he couldn’t be the Christian God based on their own subjective understanding of love.
Whatever. I simply don't have any belief in any God, which, as is relevant to this thread, that clearly includes the Christian God. Also, my lack of belief doesn't relate primarily to my understanding of love at all, but rather to the complete lack of evidence for any God's existence.
But what of the person who isn’t self satisfied with the quality of their own love? Is that because they have been led to feel inadequate by bad actors or because they have a grasp of a more superior love?
Possible, just as it is possible that such a person has been unable to express
their own natural love satisfactorily due to problems within their own lives. It also begs the question as to who decides just what is 'a more superior love' of course.
There is an element here that humans choose to sin as in they choose to do good. That we have inherited a fallen world, undeniably in my view gives us a propensity to choose sin.....but that is still a choice.
I would say that sins are symptomatic of alienation from God which is a class of sin on it’s own
I know you do. However, for me, as I made clear, a relationship with a God in which I don't believe is meaningless, ditto for the idea of a fallen world, alienation from God etc.
What about Sin as alienation from God though. Do you not see that as a possible personal position.
Yes, of course it is possible, if one has a belief in a such a God. Obviously, in my case, I don't, so it isn't relevant for me.
In the Anglican confession there are the sins against our fellow men... surely these are relevant to you?
Only insofar as they align with my own sense of morality. I wouldn't even call them sins in any religious sense, of course, so the idea of kneeling and praying using the words of the confession from the Anglican book of Common Prayer would be entirely inappropriate in my case.