Holy Laughter
“I smile at my enemies." —1
Samuel 2:2
Laughter, I read somewhere, is caused by
the sudden perception of an incongruity. A story or event takes an unexpected,
surprising twist, jerks our minds around and we laugh. It's a gift God has not
given to the animal kingdom. Only human beings laugh.
The biblical word “joy” suggests a
similar idea—a response to a sudden turn of events, a serendipity, a “surprise.” (That’s the basis of the pun in Lewis’ autobiography, Surprised by Joy.) God sends a
happy surprise and the emotion we feel is joy.
To illustrate: I have a friend who spent
four years of his life and thousands of dollars pursuing a Ph.D. at a
prestigious university in California. When he met with his faculty advisors to
defend his dissertation he was told that it was not acceptable. "Lacking in
scholarly support," they said, but in reality their rejection was based on
his Christian presuppositions.
Two thoughts went through Bob’s mind. The
first was the sight of thousands of dollars and four years of his life
sprouting wings and flying away. Then the words of a chorus broke through:
I’d rather have Jesus than silver or
gold;
I’d rather have him than have riches
untold.
I’d rather have Jesus than anything
this world affords today.
And Bob laughed—at which point his
advisors thought he had lost his mind.
No, Bob just got the joke.
David Roper
4.1.17
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