There is a time for
everything... a time to weep and a time to laugh... Ecclesiastes 3:1,4
I read something recently
which reduced me to a state of helpless laughter. It was an article in the
Church of England newspaper The Church Times (yes, really), and it was about a bishop of a bygone generation who
had a wonderful if sometimes waspish sense of humour. Absolutely hilarious - it
took me several minutes to regain control of myself. If ever you have had “a
fit of the giggles” (and if you haven’t I feel really sorry for you) you will
know what I’m talking about.
But the following day this
article nearly caused me death by drowning. All right, that’s a bit of an
exaggeration, but for a moment it was decidedly dodgy.
I was doing my regular
twice-weekly half-mile swim in the local pool (feel free to utter a gasp of
amazement and admiration) when one of the bishop’s gags came unbidden into my
mind. Whereupon I found myself floundering, spluttering and barely able to breathe.
I wondered if I was about to suffer the same fate as that man who died of a
heart-attack while rolling about in laughter at a Morecambe and Wise television
programme. (If you aren’t familiar with Morecambe and Wise, they were a famous
comedy duo way back in the 1970s.)
Well, here I am now writing
this, so you will realise that I did in fact survive the experience. But it
made me do some thinking about laughter. Is there a specifically Christian view of laughter?
Only indirectly. The Bible
has very little to say about it - this verse in Ecclesiastes 3 is about the
nearest we get. There are, true, indications elsewhere that God delights to see
his people laughing - have a look, for example, at Psalm 126:2 and Luke 6:21. But
the laughter mentioned here is laughter from sheer happiness rather than at
jokes or wisecracks. There’s not much at all about what we call “a sense of
humour”. Still, these verses do remind us that God loves to see his people happy. (Is that a reminder you need?)
Lacking much to go on in the
Bible, I’ve been doing a bit of rummaging around in Christian history to see if
some of the church’s wise heads have much to offer. And I have been impressed
by the things they have to say.
Here is Martin Luther, short
and to the point: “If you’re not allowed to laugh in heaven, I don’t want to go
there”. (I suspect, mind you, that that isn’t one of his more deeply thought-out
theological utterances.)
Here is Richard Baxter, a seventeenth
century puritan pastor and scholar: “Keep company with the more cheerful sort
of the Godly; there is no mirth like the mirth of believers”.
Amen to that! I recently
spent a morning in the company of a group of volunteers stuffing publicity
envelopes for the Africa Inland Mission, and it really was a laugh-a-minute
business: completely silly, perfectly innocent - and very uplifting.
And here is somebody called
Sydney Harris: “God cannot be solemn, or he would not have blessed man with the
incalculable gift of laughter”. Yes?
And somebody called Grant
Lee: “Shared laughter creates a bond of friendship. When people laugh together
they cease to be young and old, master and pupil, worker and foreman. They have
become a single group of human beings, enjoying their existence”. I think
that’s worth a second read... laughter is a great leveller, ironing out the inequalities and breaking down the
barriers between people.
Of course it isn’t only
Christians who have good things to say.
Here is the Jew Philo, who
lived around the time of Jesus: “God is the creator of laughter that is good”. That
last bit is important, of course - sadly, this world is not short of ugly, nasty,
spiteful, vulgar laughter, and as Christians we should not be guilty of it.
And here are a couple of
proverbs: “He is not laughed at that laughs at himself first”. I like that! How
good are you at laughing at yourself and your own quirks, idiosyncrasies and
ridiculousnesses? Do you take yourself too seriously? Lighten up!
And from Spain: “One who is always laughing is a fool, and one who never laughs is a knave”. Well, perhaps that word “knave” is
a bit harsh; some people are naturally humourless without being bad people. But
certainly there is something a little disturbing about people who can’t laugh.
I’ll finish with a word of
advice, just in case you might need it one day: It’s not a good idea to combine
(a) swimming with (b) having a fit of hysterical laughter. Trust me; I know.
Meanwhile, a note to self: Must
laugh more.
Father in heaven,
thank you for the wonderful gift of laughter. May my laughter always be pure,
wholesome, health-giving - and honouring to Jesus. Amen.
PS. By the way, did you hear
about the scarecrow who was awarded a prize for being outstanding in his field?
Boom
boom.
Lol.
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