I think if I had only read certain parts of it, I might have yawned and found it boring as well; however, when all of it comes together, it’s so incredibly beautiful that “boring” is the last word I would use to describe it.
In high school my mom would pull a sentence or two to try to explain things to me, but I usually rolled my eyes. Not to say that I didn’t listen… rather, I merely behaved like a Catholic because I was *supposed * to, not because I wanted to. When I came to college, a girl I worked with happened to mention TotB in passing, so I thought, “What the heck, I’ll give it a try.” I picked up a copy of Theology for the Body for Beginners by Christopher West and could not put it down. Relating sex to the Eucharist?? I mean really. I never could have conceived of such a notion… and now it actually makes sense!
Before I had read it, most of my friends (even Catholics) would laugh when I said I would never use birth control… one of them told me, “My mother is a devout Catholic and even she used the pill.” And I never really knew how to respond… which of course always made me look foolish to them, especially in this sex-crazed college environment. After I read the book, I offered it to one of my friends (a non-Catholic). A week later she came to me and said “I never would have believed it… but IT MAKES SENSE! Catholics don’t just make this stuff up…”
My girl’s rosary group spent last semester reading and discussing TotB. Some of them had never even been aware of the Church’s teachings… and I think that’s where Pope John Paul II (with the help of Christopher West) has done something ground-breaking. Our culture has become so oblivious to the true meaning of love, but this work is really penetrating college campuses. It presents old information in a way that truly makes sense, especially in the minds of high-schoolers and college-students who might not want to listen to their parents.
Earlier this evening I was talking with someone who wants to integrate TotB into a school in Africa. He was talking about how they don’t like condoms, can’t afford the pill, but certainly aren’t going to practice NFP just for the heck of it. People have to understand the theology behind our beliefs before they’ll actually want to take part in what is currently seen as an inconvenience to their sexual desires. Somehow I can see how that applies more toward Americans than Africans. Go figure.
Anyway, I could talk all day about this, but alas, school…