
The Three Loves - Eros, Philia, and Agape
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to Wish List failed.
Remove from Wish List failed.
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
By:
About this listen
This is one of Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen's most celebrated and insightful talks, essential for anyone seeking to understand the true nature of love beyond sentimental clichés. You should listen because Sheen masterfully unpacks the three different kinds of love—Eros, Philia, and Agape—and reveals how our modern confusion stems from reducing all love to a single, often selfish, dimension. With his trademark wit and profound wisdom, he explains that the Christian life is a journey of elevating our natural affections into a supernatural, divine love that is sacrificial, committed, and ultimately, the only kind that can bring us true and lasting peace.
Sheen begins by exploring Eros, the love of attraction and friendship, lamenting how it has been tragically degraded in modern culture into the purely "erotic," an experience-driven impulse that forgets the person. He then moves to Philia, the selfless love for all humanity, illustrating its power with the incredible true story of prisoners of the communists who shared a single lump of sugar for two years, keeping one another alive through an act of profound charity. This sets the stage for his explanation of the highest love, Agape—the divine love of God for us, a love that is not earned but freely given even when we are unlovable enemies.
The Archbishop brings this theology to a stunning climax with a powerful analogy of a courtroom, where God the Father, as judge, condemns His own Son to die in our place, demonstrating the perfect union of justice and mercy. This divine Agape, he argues, is the love we are called to, a love proven not by feelings but by the will. He concludes by explaining that our human hearts are created with a "piece missing," a void that no earthly love can fill, and that we will never be whole-hearted or truly at peace until we return to God to reclaim the part of our heart He has been keeping for us from all eternity.