BEYOND WINTER: The Irrelevant Humor of An Old Man—MAKING FRIENDS LAUGH [2-20-25]
What do you do when your hip, your computer, your furnace fan, and your car all go bad at the same time? Well, nothing! Not until you get them fixed. So I missed my usual every-other-day schedule of posting columns this week because of furnace repair guys, physical therapy, tow trucks, and computer guys who like to talk but cannot work and talk at the same time. The furnace fan is still a mystery, even though we did pay for a service call. Anyway… I suspect people would have laughed had they seen my befuddlement this week, which is the segue to…
Most people come to church hoping the preacher will say something funny, that they’ll have some reason to laugh.
I always felt that I needed to entertain a friend. In the early days, that meant telling jokes.
Fifteen-year-old boys rival dads for corny jokes. They collect them and tell them. I certainly took my turn at that.
[Spoiler alert: you’ve probably heard these jokes before…]
Preachers are especially subject to laughs about butts. Perhaps because it seems so naughty. Especially in the context of worship.
I remember how the late, great George Paterson laughed so hard when I told him and Ida Belle the one about the pastoral prayer in the worship service. The preacher intoned, “…we are but dust,” and would have gone on, but a little voice piped up and said, “Mommy, what’s butt dust?”
And Joe Snider, our wonderful pastor when I was retired, laughed so hard when I told him about something his successor did. She had been an accountant for many years before entering the ministry, and she preached like an accountant. She liked to build up all the arguments for a theological proposition, and then switch and name all the arguments against it. On one fateful Sunday, she got to the switch point and said, “But…and I’ve got a really big but here…” The congregation went deathly silent. We all knew that if one of us broke and giggled, the whole place would go up. Joe went exactly the opposite of silent; he knew just what each of those folks would look like, shoulders trembling as they tried to suppress guffaws.
Talk show host Stephen Colbert was only ten years old when his father and two brothers were killed in a plane crash. He thinks he became a comedian because after that loss, each time he could make his mother laugh was so precious.
Some of my happiest memories are when I made someone laugh. Not just genial laughter, but the loss-of-control laughter of surprise.
My father was a quiet man by nature, and even more so after he lost his eyesight in an industrial accident when I was five. He had so little to laugh about. When I was in my junior high joke spieling period, he was more likely to tell me to shut up than to laugh. When Helen joined the family, though, he loosened up so much. She’s had a knack for charming old men. Still does.
We were visiting my family—younger brother and sister still at home—when I told the story about Harry Truman campaigning out west on an Indian reservation. [1] Truman said, “You’re going to have chicken in every pot.” The Indians chanted, “Oompah! Oompah!” He continued: “And a car in front of every wigwam.” “Oompah! Oompah!” And so on. When he was finished, the chief said, “Mr. President, please step into the corral so we can present you with our best horse and silver-mounted saddle. But be careful. Don’t step in the oompah.” Daddy had voted for Truman, but he was sure than anything a politician said was oompah, but he’d never heard that word for it before. It caught him by surprise. He laughed until tears ran down his face.
We need laughter in the world right now. Say something funny. Even if you are the only one who laughs…
John Robert McFarland
1] “Indian” is the term
the joke used.