Eco’s Error; Or, Why Some People Like Casablanca
Casablanca is not about passion, but about altruistic love, animated by the rare spirit of sacrifice.
Casablanca is not about passion, but about altruistic love, animated by the rare spirit of sacrifice.
There’s little point in visiting a monastery where none of the monks have tasted beatitude, and a father who hasn’t kept faith over years of disciplining action can’t really hope to steer his son true.
“I didn’t even look in the mirror to say goodbye to myself. I didn’t care. I wanted to be blind.”
On Saturday, Christ conquers the fires of hell, and leaves its gates ajar behind him.
Acceptable forms of sacrifice may change throughout time, but its essence remains. It is based on the deeply rooted sense of something more important than oneself: a deity, a family, a nation, or the entire world.
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