Introduction

Sex in the family is a common theme in the history of mankind. The royal families made a practice of keeping it that way legally. The pharaohs of Egypt married brother to sister, father to daughter. The Hapsburghs and the Tudors married first cousin to first cousin.

It was only the common people who were told that sexual congress within their families was sinful.

But then, the common people may have finally made out better in the long run. Genetic defects have taken their toll of the royal families which no longer hold power.

Unfortunately, the idea of sin has become enmeshed in the concept of incest. The psychological ramifications are tremendous. Daughters raped by their fathers are traumatized for the rest of their lives, suffering more from the intangible fear of sin than from the physical contact of rape and incest, which is, after all, lingering and possibly even pleasant.

Somehow, the line must be drawn which separates the concepts of sex and pleasure from sin and damnation. Physical pain, for instance, usually is mostly a form of intense discomfort which can be swept away and forgotten in time. Too much sin is psychological torture, which the victim carries with him or her until death parts them.

These books are intended to teach the reader the difference. But to the subject, the reader must bring his own perceptions and thoughts before he can learn the authors.

-The Publisher