Jesus and the Urantia Book
Blog Stories
Are You Lukewarm?
Did we Evolve from Apes?
Big Bang...Or
God Within
  Home Page

  Quote Of The Day

  Urantia Book Search Engine

  Urantia Book

  Jesus And The Urantia Book

  Urantia Book Video

  Urantia Book Audio

  The Gallery

  Heartwarming And Humorous Stories

  Discussion Forum

  Answers To Life's Toughest Questions

  News, Blogs, Games + Social

  How The Urantia Book Changed My Life

  Spiritual Studies

  Get Involved

  FAQ

  Links

  About Us

  Store

  Buscar solo en El libro de Urantia

  El Libro De Urantia

  Procure apenas no Livro de Urântia

  O Livro De Urantia

  The Urantia Book non illustrated

Urantia Book Commentary and Articles Blog
Urantia Book Commentary and Articles Blog Home |  Urantia Book Commentary and Articles Blog Archives | 
See More Blogs |  Discussion Board |  Truthbook.com Home
Atom     RSS


Fri, January 27, 2012
My take: Reclaiming Jesus’ sense of humor


By James Martin  

By James Martin, Special to CNN

Here’s a serious question about levity: The Bible clearly paints a picture of Jesus of Nazareth as a clever guy, but he never seems to laugh, much less crack a smile. Did Jesus really have no sense of humor; didn't he ever laugh?

Well, one difficulty with finding humor in the New Testament is that what was seen as funny to those living in Jesus' time may not seem funny to us.

If part of being human includes having a sense of humor, and if Jesus was “fully human,” as Christians believe, he must have had a fully developed sense of humor. Indeed, his sense of humor may be one unexamined reason for his ability to draw so many disciples around him with ease.

It’s time to set aside the notion that Jesus was a humorless, grim-faced, dour, unsmiling prude. Let’s begin to recover his humor and, in the process, his humanity.

See "Link to External Source Article" below to read further.


From The Urantia Book:

141:3.6 The pictures of Jesus have been most unfortunate. These paintings of the Christ have exerted a deleterious influence on youth; the temple merchants would hardly have fled before Jesus if he had been such a man as your artists usually have depicted. His was a dignified manhood; he was good, but natural. Jesus did not pose as a mild, sweet, gentle, and kindly mystic. His teaching was thrillingly dynamic. He not only meant well, but he went about actually doing good.

Jesus at Age Fourteen

123:4.3 Jesus, in company with a neighbor boy and later his brother James, delighted to play in the far corner of the family carpenter shop, where they had great fun with the shavings and the blocks of wood. It was always difficult for Jesus to comprehend the harm of certain sorts of play which were forbidden on the Sabbath, but he never failed to conform to his parents' wishes. He had a capacity for humor and play which was afforded little opportunity for expression in the environment of his day and generation, but up to the age of fourteen he was cheerful and lighthearted most of the time.

The Apostle Thomas Appreciated Jesus' Humor

139:8.7 ...Thomas revered his Master because of his superbly balanced character. Increasingly Thomas admired and honored one who was so lovingly merciful yet so inflexibly just and fair; so firm but never obstinate; so calm but never indifferent; so helpful and so sympathetic but never meddlesome or dictatorial; so strong but at the same time so gentle; so positive but never rough or rude; so tender but never vacillating; so pure and innocent but at the same time so virile, aggressive, and forceful; so truly courageous but never rash or foolhardy; such a lover of nature but so free from all tendency to revere nature; so humorous and so playful, but so free from levity and frivolity. It was this matchless symmetry of personality that so charmed Thomas. He probably enjoyed the highest intellectual understanding and personality appreciation of Jesus of any of the twelve.


Labels:  James Martin   Jesus   humor   Bible   New Testament     

Permalink |  Link to External Source Article



Archives

Atom     RSS