Genesis 18:1-15 · The Three Visitors
All You Can Do is Laugh
Genesis 18:1-15, Genesis 21:1-7
Sermon
by Lori Wagner
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“God has given me laughter. Everyone who hears about it will laugh with me.” Sarah (Genesis 21:6)

Laughter has got to be one of the strangest phenomena in the human response system. Why do humans laugh? “It’s rarely because something’s funny,” say Peter McGraw and Joel Warner of Slate Magazine.[1]The two describe an example of the vexing phenomenon of “laughing disease” in Tanzania, in which schoolgirls in a strict boarding school couldn’t stop laughing. The “disease” spread so virulently that the school had to shut down for 16 days. When the “epidemic” slowed months later, a thousand people had been afflicted by an obsessive laughter the locals called “omuneepo.”[2] Scientists later suspected that the laughter began as an unconscious, unplanned protest response to the strict and harsh conditions at the school. Laughing was the only way the students could express their discomfort at their situation.

In further studies on laughter, researchers found that humans use laughter to express what cannot be said in any other way, either that everything is in good fun, or that something is very, very wrong.[3]

Laughter is spontaneous. We may laugh when something tickles our funny bone. But we also laugh when we find ourselves in “absurd” situations. When our lives feel utterly hopeless, meaningless, thwarted, and senseless, laughter seems the only possible response. Somehow, by laughing, the situation becomes lighter, or if not, at least we extract ourselves from it. Laughing alters our emotional perspective on a serious situation beyond our control and unburdens us from drowning in it or believing in it too much. Laughter is suspended reality.

When we laugh, we are suddenly removed from the gravity of our plight; we transcend it, even if only for a brief time. This provides an emotional respite, a needed relief. But this response doesn’t just relieve us emotionally. We know that laughter also has physical benefits, such as lowering your blood pressure, boosting heart rate, and producing antibodies which strengthen the immune system. It’s no joke that cancer patients who laugh frequently and have a positive attitude about life will actually improve more and live longer.

Laughter makes you feel better.  It lifts you up. It improves mood. In fact, even “fake” laughter can improve your mood. If you keep laughing, eventually you’ll feel more positive, optimistic, and hopeful.

When things get too serious, too awful, to the point of absurdity, you just need to laugh. It’s like a shout of protest in the face of circumstances beyond one’s control, the mundane sadness of life, the moving in of walls, the feeling of being boxed in. Laughter is a kind of “breaking free” from that existential cage, and a spit in the eye of the darker side of life.

Laughter is our deep outburst of defiance against the gravity of the world.It is God’s gift to the human spirit, spontaneous laughter, the ultimate defiance to hopelessness and death. Laughter takes us by surprise. Laughter is an “anti-gravity” miracle. Levity. It “levitates” your spirit, your mood, lifts you up out of your grounded reality and into a place of hope, belief, faith, and the demand for a different truth.

Laughter can sometimes be deep joy resonating and bubbling up from the depths of the soul in the face of trouble, sin, sadness, and hopelessness. It can sometimes be our equally absurd, nonsensical shout at the absurdity and senselessness of the world we live in. But laughter can also burst forth as spontaneous relief in response to an unexpected miracle. It can be unexpectedly precipitated by God’s “absurd”salvific response to our inescapable human plight. I like to call this kind of moment when God surprises us with a miracle so ridiculous and far-fetched that all we can do is burst out laughing –a laugh of relief for our impossible rescue, disbelief in the face of extreme grace, the gratitude of an impossible response to an equally impossible situation. I like to call this act of God, “divine absurdity.”

This is the kind of laughter we see today in Genesis 18 in the story of Abraham and Sarah. Abraham and Sarah had longed for a child, but Sarah was barren. In her old age, long after she had stopped menstruating (18:11), the Lord appeared to Abraham in the form of “three men” and told Abraham that Sarah would become pregnant and bear a son. At hearing this, Sarah burst out laughing! At first Sarah is frightened that God heard her laugh. She didn’t want God to interpret her laughter as rude disbelief. Yet, God is not angry, but affirms Sarah’s laughter. And when Sarah bears Isaac, (Yitzchaq in Hebrew), she names him after the laughter God blessed her with. For Sarah’s laughter was the recognition of God’s miracle, God’s absurd and impossible miracle in the midst of her barren expectations. The word Isaac means, "he will laugh, he will rejoice,” derived from the Hebrew verb which means "to laugh.” Sarah’s laughter acknowledges God’s power to defy the rules of nature, to defy our worldly expectations and logic, to supersede even the parameters of our own faith. Laughter is Sarah’s spontaneous evocation of gratitude, joy, and faith in the face of God’s miraculous presence in her seemingly tedious, non-spectacular, ordinary, and lowly life.

God created laughter for just such “divine absurdities.” Not only must we laugh in the midst of despair, but we must also spontaneously rejoice in the face of God’s very presence as a resistance to the mundanity of our human existence. For God is the ultimate revolutionary.

Laughter is the sister of faith.Faith is absurd. It is divine absurdity, the ultimate defiance to hopelessness and death, a divine declaration of the miracle of God’s unpredictable presence in an otherwise predictable world.

Faith is believing in divine absurdity. In faith, we laugh in the face of danger at the immensity of God’s miracle of salvation and life. In faith, we give thanks to God for the gift of laughter in difficult times, for God’s gift of spontaneous faith and trust in the Lord’s ability for miraculous intervention.

In the scriptures, we see signs of God’s divine absurdity everywhere! In Sarah’s pregnancy, in Elizabeth’s pregnancy, in Mary’s pregnancy, in the sprouting of Aaron’s rod and the power of Moses’ staff, in the parting of the Red Sea and the Jordan River, in the miracles of Jesus, even in the unsure Peter as the “rock” of God’s Church, and the persecutor Paul as the evangelist of God’s kingdom! But the most divinely absurd action of God in history culminates with the resurrection of Jesus from the tomb, as God laughs in the face of death, because God reigns over death.

In the face of COVID-19, rubber bullets and tear gas, looting and killing, tornadoes and hurricanes, losses of jobs and homes, tears, sadness, depression, and frustration, God invites us to laugh at the divine absurdity of Jesus’ resurrection and the absurd realization that we too can and will experience all kinds of resurrection in our lives and ultimate resurrection even in our death.

Laughter is a form of freedom.  It releases us from the tensions and bonds of our despair and lifts us into a place of faith in God’s spontaneous ability to act in this world and in our lives at any moment.

“Faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen,” says the author of Hebrews (11:1). For every Christian, for every human being created and sanctified by God, faith is that irrational force that laughs in the face of darkness, barrenness, danger, and despair, and believes in fountains in the desert, water gushing up from dry wells, olive trees in winter, new life emerging from dead seeds. Faith knows that God’s absurd miracles can always transcend the absurdity of sin and evil, restoring meaning to the meaningless and hope in the void.

So laugh people of God! Let your laughter rip forth, burst out, bubble up, double you up, because God is here even in the midst of your turmoil and your fear, even in the midst of your worry and your pain, telling you that a miracle is just around the corner.

And get this! Laughter is contagious.It’s communal and connectional. It’s healing. And it’s a sign of hope.Every time you laugh, you lift someone else near you a little bit higher and convince them that divine miracles are real.

Our world today needs a little “omuneepo.” We need to fight the viruses of the world, both biological and social, with some good strong uncontainable laughter, and a whole lot of faith.

Today and always, may your laughter be unstoppable, may your gratitude be spontaneous, and most of all, may your faith be absurd.


[1] Peter McGraw and Joel Warner, “Why do humans laugh? The evolutionary biology of laughter,” March 25, 2014, Slate.com.

[2]Omuneepo is Swahili for “laughing disease.”

[3] McGraw and Warner

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., by Lori Wagner