Jesus and the Sacred Art of Humor: A Theological Exploration Through the Great Theorists of Mirth
Link to video I invite you into a conversation that may feel, at first, a little surprising. We are quite comfortable speaking of Jesus as healer and teacher, as prophet, priest, and crucified Lord. We know how to talk about his compassion, his courage, his suffering, and his resurrection. But we speak far less often of Jesus as a man of sharp wit, subtle irony, playful reversal—a man whose words could make people smile even as they squirmed under the truth. Yet the Gospels are full of that side of him. His images are sometimes vivid to the point of absurdity. His parables are full of comic turns. His teaching often pierces pretension with the precision and timing of a good punchline. If the incarnation really means that the Word became flesh—not a thin, reduced slice of humanity, but the full weight and wonder of it—then surely Jesus’ sense of humor is part of the truth of who he is. What I would like to do with you is to look at Jesus’ humor through the lens of those who have thought...