Chapter 2 works like a survey of love’s forms: God’s love, True Parents, parents, spouses, sexual love, children, siblings, and social love all appear as modes of one underlying reality. The chapter’s shape matters. It argues that love cannot stay abstract; it has to become historical, embodied, familial, and developmental.
The chapter also binds ontology to formation. Love is real in all these forms, but it is only understood by living through them.