
Chuckle in the Lord! 
Life can be full of laughter. Actually it
should be full of laughter. Eugene O'Neill
wrote a play which he named Lazarus Laughed.
In it, he pictures Lazarus, after his resurrection
from the dead, going about laughing.
Why? Because Lazarus now knows the secret.
He himself is amazed at what he has just
discovered. "There is only life!"
he keeps exclaiming. "I heard the heart
of Jesus laughing in my heart . . . and I
laughed in the laughter of God! " The
growing crowds that surround Lazarus capture
his mood and as they march forward, they
start chanting, "Laugh! Laugh! Laugh
with Lazarus! Fear is no more! There is no
death!"
At the climax of the play, Lazarus faces
Caesar who has decided to condemn him to
death. But Lazarus laughs at the Emperor's
threats. Now he knows the secret. He is put
to death still laughing. Poor Caesar, he
is completely baffled; how can a man laugh
going towards a certain death? Caesar does
not know the secret of a Christian!
They say that Martin Luther had a rather
depressive temperament. One morning when
he was quite despondent, his wife came downstairs
all dressed in black. Surprised, Luther asked
her who was dead. She replied, "Oh,
you have not heard? God died."
Luther rebuked her, "How can you talk
such nonsense, Katie? How can God die?"
"Is that really true?" she asked.
"Well, if He is not dead, explain to
me why you are so disconsolate and discouraged?"
God is alive and so there is no reason not
to laugh. Obstacles exist but He is bigger
than they are. Sin exists but He is well
known for taking pride in forgiving sins.
Many times in life we are losers but the
victory through the Lamb has been promised
to us.
Sometimes He surprises us and gives us just
the opposite of what we expect or want. But
as Louis Evely said in his precious book
'Joy' "God is God only if he surprises
us, disappoints us, disconcerts us. He is
too large for our heart to contain. If he
did only what we expected of him, he would
not be God, but an idea or dream of ours."
The secret is to keep always lifting our
eyes to Him. A small boy was heard praying,
"Dear God, I hope you take good care
of yourself, because if anything happens
to you, we would all be in a real mess!"
I eagerly say Amen to that prayer!
The secret is to keep looking beyond the
obvious. There is a story of two identical
twins. One was a hope-filled optimist, the
other one was a sad and hopeless pessimist.
One Christmas morning, both of them came
down from their bedroom eager to go over
their Christmas presents.
The parents had come up with a brilliant
idea. They gave the pessimist the best toys
they could afford, while they gave the optimist
a box of manure. As expected, the pessimist,
as he unwrapped all these goodies, started
complaining, "I don't like the color
of this computer ... I'll bet this calculator
will break . . . I don't like this game .
. . I know someone who's got a bigger toy
car than this . . ."
On the other side, their little optimist
boy was gleefully throwing the manure up
in the air. He was giggling. "You can't
fool me! Where there's this much manure,
there's gotta be a pony!"
Indeed, happiness is in the heart, not in
the circumstances. The little ones know.
A kindergarten teacher was observing her
classroom of children while they drew. She
would occasionally walk around to see each
child's artwork. As she got to one little
girl who was working diligently, she asked
what the drawing was.
The girl replied, "I'm drawing God."
The teacher paused and said, "but no
one knows what God looks like."
Without missing a beat, or looking up from
her drawing the girl replied, "They
will in a minute."
A happy person can even knock over criticism
into humor. In his mail one morning, the
pastor found one single sheet in an envelope
on which was written one word: "fool".
The next Sunday he announced, "I have
known many people who have written letters
and forgot to sign their names. But this
week I received a letter from someone who
signed his name and forgot to write the letter!"
Yes, happiness is not the absence of problems,
but the ability to deal with them. A mother
was preparing pancakes for her sons, Kevin
5 and Ryan 3. The boys began to argue over
who would get the first pancake. Their mother
saw the opportunity for a moral lesson. "If
Jesus was sitting here, He would say "Let
my brother have the first pancake, I can
wait." Hearing this, Kevin turned to
his younger brother and said, "Ryan,
you be Jesus!'
Yes, remember… laughter even makes you beautiful!
I have never seen a smiling face that was
not beautiful!
(c) Fr. Pius Sammut, OCD. Permission
is
hereby granted for any non-commercial
use,
provided that the content is unaltered
from
its original state, if this copyright
notice
is included.
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