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Taking Laughter Seriously Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 6, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Drain your life of humor, and it is like draining your car of oil. You will not get far before you lose power and lock up the engine. Laughter keeps the engine of life running smooth. It allows us to keep making progress down the road to God's goals.
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Tom Mullen begins his book, Laughing Out Loud and Other
Religious Experiences with this story. An engineer, a psychologist,
and a theologian were hunting in the wilds of Northern Canada. They
came across a isolated cabin, and decided to check it out. When no
one answered their knocks, they tried the door and found it open. It
was a simple two room cabin with a minimum of furniture. Nothing
was surprising about the cabin except the stove. It was a typical pot
bellied cast ironed stove, but it was suspended in mid air by wires
attached to the ceiling beams.
The psychologist was the first to speculate on this strange location
for a stove. He said, "It is obvious that this lonely trapper, isolated
from humanity, has elevated his stove so he can curl up under it and
vicariously experience a return to the womb." "Nonsense!" Replied
the engineer. "The man is clearly practicing laws of thermodynamics.
By elevating his stove he has discovered a way to distribute the heat
more evenly throughout the cabin." "With all due respect,"
interrupted the theologian, "I'm sure that hanging his stove from the
ceiling has religious meaning. Fire lifted up has been a religious
symbol for centuries."
As the three debated their theories, the trapper returned, and they
asked him immediately why he hung his stove by wires from the
ceiling. He said, "Because I had plenty of wire, but not much stove
pipe." The answer to many mysteries is much simpler than we think.
Reading commentaries on the book of Ecclesiastes is often like
listening to those three hunters speculate about the stove. They come
up with complex and confusing theories to explain this book, and the
theories are more difficult to grasp than the book itself. The simple
and obvious, and commonsense approach is the best. All we have to
do is recognize that Solomon is simply telling us how he really felt. He
is not saying he should feel this way, or that it is good to feel this way,
but that it is how he really felt. He had himself a ball, and laughed his
head off, and then he examined the experience afterward, and he
concluded that laughter, like the rest of the pleasures of life, is of no
use.
You do not need any complex theory to explain this. It is simple.
He is depressed because laughter and pleasure are merely passing
experiences, and they are not permanent, and so they do not fill the
human need for the eternal. The merry monarch found his mirth of
little worth, and it left him melancholy. This is no surprise, for we
have all had that kind of experience where after a good time we
become to some degree depressed simply because the laughter
doesn't last, and the pleasure of it does not persist.
This is an universal experience, and that is why it is in the Bible. It
good for all of us to know that even the man with everything goes
through the same experience we do. This releases us from the burden
of envy where we think we could escape this type of feeling if only we
were somebody else, especially somebody with everything life can
offer. It also releases us from the burden of loneliness when we feel we
have emotions that the rest of the human race does not have. Paul
said in I Cor. 10:13, "No temptation has seized except what is common
to man."
What the Bible teaches is that the common man is the only kind of
man there is. Solomon was so great, wise, and unique in many ways,
but he was still a common man. That was the kind of man Jesus
became as well, for there is no other kind, and he entered into the
same temptations and the same feelings that we all experience. "He
was tempted in all points like as we are, yet without sin." Jesus
understood what Solomon was saying in this book. He had plenty of
good times and laughter, but he also knew its limitations, and he
endured the experience of depression, and was a man of sorrows and
acquainted with grief.
Solomon was right, for laughter is not enough to give life ultimate
meaning. But it is, nevertheless, a vital part of the meaningful life.
Solomon is himself one of the key authorities in the Bible for
supporting the value of laughter. Why then, if he sees the worth of
mirth, does he stress the worthlessness of it here? It is because, like
all other values of life, if they are sought as goal of life, and one
becomes as obsessed with them that they push God into a secondary
position, they become sources of sickness rather than health, when this