The Joy of Words
One of the choir school boys—he might be 25 years old now, but back then he was just 8 or 9—was bursting with excitement. He wanted to tell me a joke. “Go ahead,” I said.
He: “A dog walked into a bar. Ouch!” Then he dissolved in laughter. A precocious boy (they all were precocious in one way or another), he knew enough to enjoy not only the double meaning of “bar”; he knew also that “walked into a bar” was a type of joke that usually went on longer. So it was funny that it just stopped. Ouch!
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Jokes are great things to share with children. In a group, they all laugh. The older ones get the joke. The younger ones don’t, but they laugh anyway. When one person laughs, everyone else wants to laugh also.
And the children in-between, they are the most interesting. They get it and they laugh, but then they want to explain it. One of my grandchildren will tell me, “bar means two things: it’s a place people go, and it’s a hard thing you might run into.”
I have a new one to tell him—new to me; I heard it on a radio “joke show” and managed to write it down before I forgot it. “Why was Cinderella so lousy at baseball? She ran away from the ball and she had a pumpkin for a coach.” I can’t wait to tell it. I will try to resist explaining it.
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The joy of words goes way back, all the way to the beginning. It was the evening after the second day, and God was pondering what he was going to do next. He said to himself, “I can’t wait to say, Let the dry land appear!”
No one enjoys words more than God does.
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Out & About: As previously announced, the seminars in Dallas are on summer holiday to return Sunday, Sept 14, to discuss A Time to Die by Nicolas Diat.
More on War Basics: Some readers asked for some suggestions for further study of Christian thinking about war. There is of course “just war thinking,” sometimes misleadingly called “just war theory,” and you can find a lot on that easily. But to move deeper, I have two recommendations. The first is a slim volume by Oliver O’Donovan, The Just War Revisited. Although slim, O’Donovan’s thought is deep—these are essays that I have read and re-read many times. I had seminary students read it once and their response was overall positive.
More recent is a much longer book by Nigel Biggar, who was O’Donovan’s successor in the Regius moral theology chair at Oxford. It’s called In Defence of War. I reviewed it in National Review about 11 years ago. The review will give you a good sense of this important book, and what’s at stake with pacifism and love of the enemy: https://www.nationalreview.com/magazine/2014/01/27/peace-and-principle/