God Laughs
Illustration
by Cal Samra

In an Easter 1984 article for the Boston Sunday Globe, Harvey Cox, author of The Feast of Fools, observed, “In his Divine Comedy, Dante Alighieri reports that after he had made the tortuous ascent from hell to purgatory and then drawn close to the celestial sphere, he suddenly heard a sound he had never heard before.” Stopping and listening, Dante wrote that “it sounded like the laughter of the universe.”

The Easter story, says Cox, “gives us a clue to this baffling riddle” as to why God laughs. “God laughs, it seems, because God knows how it all turns out in the end,” wrote Cox. “God’s laughter is not that of One who can safely chortle, from a safe distance, at another’s pain. It comes from One who has also felt the hunger pangs, the hurt of betrayal by friends, and the torturer’s touch.

“Perhaps Easter Sunday provides us with the right occasion to reclaim the holy laughter that fell on Dante’s astonished ears as his steps drew near God’s dwelling place . . . Without a trace of irreverence, can we not also say there is something genuinely comic about Easter? Could it be God’s answer to those who sported and derided God’s prophet and who continue to hound and deprive God’s children today?”
New York: HarperCollins Publishers, The Joyful Christ, by Cal Samra