The other day the members of a Youth Club asked if something could be done to prevent people who came to address them from talking about sex. They said, with considerable feeling, that nearly every speaker seemed to think that youth was interested in very little else; which is, of course, not true. It is not teenagers who are so much concerned with sex as their elders, who continue to produce and read a stream of books and articles. Reaction against secrecy has led to an over-anxious campaign to assert the importance of sex, which in turn is in danger of producing the reaction that sex does not matter much anyway. A good many people have become bored by sexual experience itself, and the last thing they want is to be further bored by reading about it.
A balance has to be struck somehow, and the four books listed below illustrate awareness of this in very different quarters. On the whole they illustrate the growing recognition that the fundamental question to be tackled has to do with the nature of human beings; what is being human ? For the Christian this is a theological question, answered in terms of our creation by God in his own image and likeness. Our life, even on the simplest level and at any time or place, must be somehow like God’s own life if it is to be truly human.
We are told something of what God’s life is in the doctrine of the Trinity.
1 Manage et Celibat. F‐J. Braceland and others. IIIe Congres de l'Association catholique Internationale d'etudes medicopsychologiques. Editions du Gerf. Paris, n.p. Marriage and the Love of God. Gosling, J.. Geoffrey Chapman, London and DublinGoogle Scholar. 18s. Love and Fertility. W. Van der MarckGoogle Scholar, o.p. Sheed & Ward. ios. 6d. Logic and Sexual Morality. Wilson, John. Penguin Books. 4s.Google Scholar