Unconditional love equals self interest.......hmm an “interesting” and highly debatable equation.
So is your contention that people's motivation in behaving morally is enlightened self-interest - that the two coincide is an explanation for why particular cultures may have adopted those mores over time, but it doesn't necessarily speak to the motivation of the individual at the moment. In the same way I suspect that most people who follow the religious principle to try to live unconditionally don't actually do it BECAUSE they consciously think they will be judged... nevertheless, it's there in the background to exactly the same extent.
Though He destroy me yet shall I worship him.
Sounds like battered person syndrome to me.
and Paul’s statement that he would want people saved even if he himself had to be sent to hell.
I could be cynical and say that politicians will say anything, but let's take him at face value: I don't believe in hell or salvation, but if it ends up that I'm going to hell because I don't believe I wouldn't want everyone else to come with me, that's not a viewpoint particular to religion, that's a humanitarian belief.
Charles Aznavour and the lyrics of She.
I'm not the most poetic of souls, by nature, but reading that comes across more as a stalker who doesn't actually know her than anything else.
https://biblehub.com/1_john/4-18.htm
I'm trying to be a little more cautious about scripture, for a number of reasons (increasing awareness of just how far from the original cultural interpretations much of even the earliest translations were, the old adage that even the Devil can quote scripture leading to it being a hiding to nothing, the range of intepretations of any given section, the ease with which elements can be interpreted in different ways when devoid of the context in which there place)... but that being said:
There is no fear in love. But perfect love drives out fear, because fear has to do with punishment. The one who fears is not made perfect in love.
Within the understanding of Christianity none of us are perfect, so presumably this 'perfect' love can only be God's? For us, as humans, there will always be at least tiny frisson of fear, even if it's only the fear of rejection - if you don't fear rejection in a relationship then you have an issue, because you are in a place where you think that there is no way they could contemplate leaving, and then you stop putting in the effort.
Maybe that's why God doesn't talk to us any more, the way he allegedly used to?
That said - and, again, thinking about the context in which things are set - this is a message purporting to be about a relationship with a being that explicitly threatens with punishment for transgression, so to come with this section and ignore the fact that threat of punishment is there is disingenuous, is it not? If God's love for us is perfect love, and we need not fear punishment, then why is there the threat of punishment? If god's love is unconditional (is any other kind of love 'perfect'?) then how can we somehow fail or be fallen, how can we be discarded if we are perfectly loved?
O.