As one can tell by my screen name I am focused on love as a key ingredient of existence. I was a JW elder when I first came here and worn out from WT rules and had become acutely focused on the 'two laws'. Matthew 22:39 is one of a few places that the 'two laws' are recorded where we are told to love God with our whole heart, soul and mind and to love your neighbor as yourself. I have recently wondered if their is a different insinuation in the original language that I have overlooked. To "love your neighbor as yourself" seems to say care for them as you would yourself, to unselfishly look out for others as you look out for yourself. I used to emphasize as an elder while helping folks with low self esteem that they must LOVE THEM SELF first to be able to love their neighbor properly. This goes along with the psychological principle that if we hate something about ourself we project that ugly quality onto others and hate them for being like us. However, in reading Wayne Dyers book The Power of Intention I had a different perception of "love your neighbor AS YOURSELF". What if the original thought was not so much 'love them like you love yourself' but 'love them as if you and they are one and the same', connected as part of a whole? Is it possible? This would go along with the philosophical interpretation of findings of quantum physics, that we are all connected, part of a single whole. A little on the original words
The original word "hos" translated "as" is also translated on other occasions to be "about, after, as , as, even as (like), for, like (as, unto), since, so (that) so. Not so helpful. However, "thyself" is the word " NT:4572 seautou (seh-ow-too'); genitive case from NT:4571 and NT:846; also dative case of the same, seautoi (seh-ow-to'); and accusative case seauton (seh-ow-ton'); likewise contracted sautou (sow-too'); sautoi (sow-to'); and sauton (sow-ton'); respectively; of (with, to) thyself:KJV - thee, thine ownself, (thou) thy (-self).
The last part quoted above says "thee, thine ownself". Is there any chance that the words used originally conveyed the thought that we should love our neighbor because we and our neighbor are inseparable, part of the same, manifestations of the whole? Should we love our neighbor because they ARE "thee, thine ownself" rather than BECAUSE we love ourselves.
If Narcissos and Leolaia will help with this, it would be nice. We will probably find the implication is that he was talking about loving others the same way we love ourselves. But is seems that since many of us have difficulty loving ourselves, It would be easier to obey the LOVE principle if we realized we were all part of a whole, that loving others was loving ourselves and visa versa.
What do you think. Jst2laws