If the sexual argument is an automatic entertainment of the Creator, then love, unlike this, belongs only to us and we can escape from the grip of the Creator. Love is our freedom. Love is beyond all "what is not of it."
The notion presented suggests that if the Creator's sexual desires are predestined, love represents a uniquely human experience that allows us to transcend divine influence. Love becomes a form of liberation, enabling us to establish ourselves outside the confines of fate or divine oversight.
This perspective positions love as a personal and autonomous force, contrasting it with more prescribed elements of existence. By framing love as a freedom, it emphasizes its power to elevate human experience above what is determined or expected, making it an essential aspect of our individuality and agency.