Yes, perfect love exists throughout the universe. Pure unconditional love is perfect love.
2007-12-19 08:49:18
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answer #1
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answered by Unity 4
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there are many names for 'perfect love', agape is one of them, it's origin is hebrew or latin, hmm? anyhoo, the one true source of perfect love is god, or your higher power. there are then several types of love we humans can share, but love is not always a feeling, it is a choice, a commitment and a job more often than not. unconditional love is true love, and it can be difficult to love, 'no matter what'. love is not tangible, and it cannot be love if you are trying to keep it. love is a hope a thought a feeling a prayer a wish...an intention to give to others and to hope you get some of it back. true love? perfct love exsists with god..the other 25 types are our attempt to love and we do a good job most of the time, because we already know and beleive there is such a thing as perfect love. otherwise we would never ask. :)
2007-12-19 16:35:46
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answer #2
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answered by angry_angels 1
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Since it is in the religion section, yes. Only God's love is perfect and unconditional. In our society's terms...yes however, it is individualized. My definition of what love is and encompasses is probably completely different from what you many define love as. My love for my fiancee may seem perfect to me but to you it could be a fake or superficial love and vice versa. Perfect love exists in the mind of the individual but only God encompasses the true definition of perfection in love.
2007-12-19 16:35:12
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answer #3
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answered by ALeoStar 4
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It is the most powerful bond in the universe, perfect love bonding the Son and the Father together unbreakably. For like reasons, God could trust his organization of servants, knowing that love would hold most of them immovably to him under test and that his organization of creatures would never secede in toto.—Ps 110:3.
The apostle John shows that God’s love is made perfect in Christians who remain in union with Him, observing the word of his Son and loving one another. (1Jo 2:5; 4:11-18) Such perfect love casts out fear, grants “freeness of speech.” Here the context shows that John is speaking of “freeness of speech toward God,” as in prayer. (1Jo 3:19-22; compare Heb 4:16; 10:19-22.) The one in whom God’s love reaches full expression can approach his heavenly Father in confidence, not feeling condemned in his heart as if hypocritical or disapproved. He knows he is observing God’s commandments and that he is doing what pleases his Father, and he is therefore free in his expressions and petitions to Jehovah. He does not feel as if under restriction by God as to what he is privileged to say or to ask for. (Compare Nu 12:10-15; Job 40:1-5; La 3:40-44; 1Pe 3:7.) No morbid fear inhibits him; he does not come to “the day of judgment” conscious of some ‘black mark’ against him or desirous of hiding certain things. (Compare Heb 10:27, 31.) As a child does not fear to ask his loving parents for anything, so the Christian in whom love is fully developed is sure that “no matter what it is that we ask according to his will, he hears us. Further, if we know he hears us respecting whatever we are asking, we know we are to have the things asked since we have asked them of him.”—1Jo 5:14, 15.
Thus, this “perfect love” does not cast out fear of every kind. It does not eliminate the reverential and filial fear of God, born of deep respect for his position, power, and justice. (Ps 111:9, 10; Heb 11:7) Neither does it do away with the normal fear that causes a person, where possible, to avoid danger or to protect his life, nor with the fear caused by sudden alarm.—Compare 1Sa 21:10-15; 2Co 11:32, 33; Job 37:1-5; Hab 3:16, 18.
Also, full unity is achieved through the “perfect bond” of love, causing true Christians to be “perfected into one.” (Col 3:14; Joh 17:23) Obviously the perfection of this unity is also relative and does not mean that all differences of personality, such as individual abilities, habits, and conscience, are eliminated. When attained, however, its fullness does lead to unified action, belief, and teaching.—Ro 15:5, 6; 1Co 1:10; Eph 4:3; Php 1:27.
2007-12-19 16:35:17
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answer #4
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answered by tahoe02_4me62 4
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yes.
John 3:16-17 (New International Version)
New International Version (NIV)
Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 by International Bible Society
16"For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son,[a] that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life. 17For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him.
2007-12-19 16:30:05
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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God is perfect love. Perfect love casts out all fear, because fear has torment. When we are in Christ and Christ in us, we have nothing to fear because perfect love casts out fear.
2007-12-19 16:33:23
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answer #6
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answered by Jeancommunicates 7
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Yes, it's called agape.
2007-12-19 16:29:14
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answer #7
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answered by Anna P 7
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Thru Jesus Christ! "YES"
God loves you....God bless
2007-12-19 16:34:40
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes, it's called GOD!
2007-12-19 16:36:35
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answer #9
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answered by keydoto 3
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I don't think so.
Love is subjective anyway.
2007-12-19 16:33:38
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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