Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • adjective Characteristic of agape

Etymologies

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Examples

  • These scriptural images imply that God isn't impassive, and that his love for us is not exclusively agapeic.

    Warranted Christian Belief 1932- 2000

  • The bridegroom rejoicing over his bride doesn't love her with a merely agapeic love.

    Warranted Christian Belief 1932- 2000

  • For in the cross, God's interruption of 'history' and the very grace by which we are given to live vulnerably in history, by way of the excess of God's agapeic love which comes ever anew from

    Faith and Theology 2008

  • For in the cross, God's interruption of 'history' and the very grace by which we are given to live vulnerably in history, by way of the excess of God's agapeic love which comes ever anew from

    Faith and Theology 2008

  • For in the cross, God's interruption of 'history' and the very grace by which we are given to live vulnerably in history, by way of the excess of God's agapeic love which comes ever anew from

    Faith and Theology 2008

  • For in the cross, God's interruption of 'history' and the very grace by which we are given to live vulnerably in history, by way of the excess of God's agapeic love which comes ever anew from

    Faith and Theology 2008

  • For in the cross, God's interruption of 'history' and the very grace by which we are given to live vulnerably in history, by way of the excess of God's agapeic love which comes ever anew from

    Faith and Theology 2008

  • For in the cross, God's interruption of 'history' and the very grace by which we are given to live vulnerably in history, by way of the excess of God's agapeic love which comes ever anew from

    Faith and Theology 2008

  • For in the cross, God's interruption of 'history' and the very grace by which we are given to live vulnerably in history, by way of the excess of God's agapeic love which comes ever anew from

    Faith and Theology 2008

  • For in the cross, God's interruption of 'history' and the very grace by which we are given to live vulnerably in history, by way of the excess of God's agapeic love which comes ever anew from

    Faith and Theology 2008

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