Zevist Love

author: Temple of Zeus
updated by: High Priest Zevios Metathronos

There's a lot of noise in spiritual circles about love. Love, love, love. New Age movements have turned it into a mantra that means nothing because it means everything. Love is an emotion. It's essential to human happiness and wellbeing. But all the shallow emphasis on "love" has cheapened it and distorted what it actually is. All emotions are equally valid and essential.

The truth is: love is something that must be earned. Not demanded. Not assumed. Earned.

What the Ancients Knew About Love

The Greeks distinguished between multiple forms of love with a precision that modern languages lack. Eros (ἔρως): passionate, desiring love. Philia (φιλία): deep friendship and loyalty between equals. Storge (στοργή): familial affection. Agape (ἀγάπη): selfless, unconditional love. Each is valid. Each has its place. The error of Christianity was taking one form (agape), stripping it of all context, and declaring it the only legitimate expression of love while weaponising it as a tool of control.

Aristotle addressed love with characteristic precision. In Nicomachean Ethics (VIII.3, 1156b6-12), he distinguishes between friendships based on utility, on pleasure, and on virtue. Only the last endures: "Perfect friendship is the friendship of those who are good, and alike in virtue." Love that is not reciprocal, that is not grounded in mutual respect and shared growth, is not love in the highest sense. It's dependency, or exploitation, or delusion.

Plato, in the Symposium (210a-211b), describes the "Ladder of Love": the soul ascends from love of a single beautiful body, to love of beauty in all bodies, to love of beautiful souls, to love of knowledge and wisdom, and finally to the contemplation of Beauty itself (the Form of the Good). Love, in the Platonic framework, is a vehicle of spiritual ascent. It's not an end in itself. It's a force that pulls the soul upward toward the divine.

The Christian Fraud of "Unconditional Love"

The Christian teaching to "love your enemies" (Matthew 5:44) is one of the most psychologically destructive doctrines ever conceived. How long would your body survive if your immune system "turned the other cheek" and embraced invading pathogens? The analogy is exact. Loving what seeks to destroy you isn't virtue. It's suicide dressed in spiritual language.

The Three Levels of Divine Love exposes this fraud in detail. Christianity claims "God loves you unconditionally" (John 3:16). The same scripture says "whoever does not believe stands condemned already" (John 3:18), "whoever rejects the Son will not see life, for God's wrath remains on them" (John 3:36), and describes the unbelievers' destination as "the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels" (Matthew 25:41). This is not unconditional love. It's extortion with a pleasant facade. Believe or burn. The Zevist framework names this pattern precisely: it is Birburim (false sacred speech) in service of Eilotil (spiritual enslavement).

How Zeus Loves

Zeus loves those who come to Him with sincerity. He doesn't waste His love on those who reject Him, who slander His name, who worship the entities that enslaved humanity. He takes care of His own. This is the true meaning of divine love: directed, purposeful, reciprocal.

The Orphic Hymn to Zeus (Hymn 15) describes Zeus as "most glorious of the Gods... father of all, beginning and end of all" and prays for His "gentle-minded holy light." The relationship between the Zevist and Zeus is one of mutual recognition: you chose Him, He chose you. The love flows in both directions, and it deepens through practice, through devotion, through showing up every day.

This is not the Abrahamic model where a distant God "loves" you the way a rancher "loves" his cattle: as property, as resources, as energy to be harvested. Zeus loves you the way a Father loves His children: with the desire that they surpass Him. That's the highest form of love in the cosmos, and it's available to you right now.

Self-Love

Self-love is also earned. Aristotle says it plainly: the person of genuine virtue is rightly a "lover of self" (Nicomachean Ethics IX.8, 1169a3-6), because what they love in themselves is what is best: their alignment with the Good. When you excel, when you push past your limits, when you know you've become the best version of yourself available to you: pride follows naturally. True pride and self-love go hand in hand. They're not gifts. They're achievements.

For the full theological treatment, see the Three Levels of Divine Love and the Family of the Gods.

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