Well, I don't, so on with your explanation, if you have one.
The inferential there isn't difficult if you have a modest familiarity with one of the religions you're intent on dismissing. The illustration in the second sentence is almost a complete quote from the Bible, John 15:13, "Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends." This is an important understanding within the context of the cross, but even if you don't know that all you have to do is connect the first sentence, which is the posit, with the second sentence, which is an illustration of it, to understand the answer, accept it or not.
This is not a coherent sentence. Want to try again?
You can say the moon is a vegetable. Same impact and objective support.
But, given I simply mirrored and broadened your own remark you get points for unintended humor, again. To extend your point so that even you won't miss it, everyone is preaching within this sort of context (an internet chatroom dedicated to religious debate) and everyone has a soapbox/pulpit.
You made a conditional statement of certainty
Rather, I answered inquiry with a speculation that is a reflection of one approach or context for the question. A context you invited when you wrote, "Be creative if you wish or pull you answers from the religious book of your choice."
y: If
X then
Y. And all I'm interested in is how you know your conditional is true:
"If love in perfection is sacrificial then man by his nature is the ideal object upon which or by which love perfected could be expressed.
Do men know their valuations to be true or do they believe them to be? Are they empirically, demonstrably true or simply consistent or inconsistent within their framework? I'd argue the latter is mostly the case with value. Broadly, social compacts tend to honor self-sacrifice above more selfish motivations, at least in principle. We set aside our highest military honor for those whose actions could be said to evidence the understanding of my Biblical paraphrase, by way of example. We give higher praise to someone who gives what they have over those who give what they can easily spare, even if that latter amount is greater in literal value than the former.
Hey, I have no lock on what people may and may not do. If you want to act as an arbiter be my guest, or if you don't want to act as an arbiter also be my guest. Don't like that I might choose to do so? Fine. Change the channel if my conclusions upset you.
I don't get upset about the comments of strangers in an internet chat room. This is fun. But I do feel free to inferentially note hypocrisy and/or an unintended humor in a given complaint.