Love is often seen as overwhelming yet fleeting romantic passion between a woman and a man. Diogenes Allen leads us to understand our love for families, for friends, and for God with an equivalent fascination and intensity. Christianity recognizes that every person carries an inalienable value simply by existing. Love recognizes this value in other people and allows loved ones to exist freely in their own way. Partners in romantic love, even though they are hopelessly dependent on one another, must struggle to support the other's independence. As we struggle to realize our own dependence on others, meanwhile recognizing their inherent worth without us, our loves--human and devine--find new depth and passion.
A helpful analysis which demonstrates how romantic love can complement Christian love (agape). Allen argues that the two great commandments of Christian scripture (love of God and love of neighbor) are not in opposition to romantic love. He elaborates how this is so in his discussions on marriage and friendship. This book is helpful to anyone seeking to understand the nature of Christian love and marriage from a theological and philosophical point of view.