I believe that TRUTH will set you free, not love. While love is arguably the most powerful thing in the world, if it is not grounded in truth, it cannot be free. A lot of what society calls "love" is infatuation, lust, tolerance, jealousy, and other subjective, temporary emotions.
Real love is unconditional and permanent (and no, I'm not necessarily referring to romantic love), and must be grounded in something more important, more solid than itself to survive or thrive. Love that is based in untruth is unstable and dangerous, and more likely to take captives than set them free.
Yes I do believe that love will set me free of all those bondage made and I get since birth and been grown day by day by my watering revisions. TO GET FREE OF ALL MY TENSIONS AND UNNECESSARY THOUGHT LOVE A A DIVINE MEDICINE EVEN GOD HAS THE SAME.
Well I am not too sure that love does set any one free. I have heard that love is a strong binding force. It's a colonizing power.
People in love relationships are always involved in power struggles where love becomes their powerful tool of subjugation. Even Vernon God Little, the protagonist of the book by DBC Pierre catagorically states that parents put a knife in the back of their children when they are born and then keep twisting it throughout their lives to remind the child. Moreover Joy Division's song does state: Love will tear us apart.(This is my attempt at a discourse.
I don't intend to kidnap, torture or slander Cupid. Please don't mistake me as a hate mongering religious fanatic. ).
In my experience working in the religious world, the people who tend to ask the question, "Do you believe in God?" are the ones who hope the answer is "yes," while the people who tend to be asked are the ones who are more inclined to say "no" or "I'm not sure." When you're asking a question with an expected answer -- and that answer is the opposite of what you hope it will be -- there's no constructive dialogue. Instead, when someone asks "Do you believe in God?" it simply comes off as a judgmental attack.
In fact, Rabbi David Wolpe recently wrote a piece here asking "Why Are Atheists So Angry?" and while he made some accurate statements, I think he missed the main reason why atheists have problems with religion -- they feel like they are being viewed as "less than" and are being judged in a harsh and negative light. How can we bring more justice and kindness into this world? Regardless of whatever particular worldview we hold, we have a responsibility to find ways to improve ourselves, our society and our world.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.