The Laughter of God Comforts Me

The New Year questions we ask ourselves in order to evaluate the past year and lay a foundation for looking ahead serve us a dish of sweet and sour, a cocktail of bitter and happy. The stories of laboring in our work — be that parenting or plowing in the nine-to-five of our everyday experiences — our life on earth is marked by the blending of joy and strife.


On Christmas Day, our family adopted a few questions my friend mentioned that her family uses every Christmas: 1. What did the Lord teach you this year? 2. What life lesson are you taking with you into the coming year? 3. What do you want the Lord to teach you or help you with in this coming year?



Asking these questions not only clarified the answers to our own hearts as we pondered our past, but built bonds of love among us, as we learned how to support and pray for one another over the course of the coming year.


On this second day of 2018, in the second chapter of Genesis, I read of the fall and the fig leaves, the first-ever question, “Where are you?” and the covering of God.


Then comes the curse: Snake will eat dust and be crushed. Woman will sting in the labor of childbearing … her children, be they natural born children, or the nurturing of other’s children, will be accompanied by pain. Man will sweat and strain in the labor of provision … his work, be it plowing or plucking keys on a computer, will be accompanied by pain.


With the curse, God gives the greater promise. The mercy that always triumphs over justice. The coming of the Seed to crush the serpent. The commitment of Love to see us through. “I will never abandon you.”



With the curse — and we should note this — God is present.


God gives Himself. He proves His love by remaining.

He could have abandoned Adam and Eve when they abandoned Him. But He didn’t. Honestly, I don’t think He could. It’s not in His character to abandon. The opposite is true of Him. God runs toward anyone who seeks Him. (Luke 15:20)


Adam and Eve have two sons. Cain first, then Abel. Cain and Abel both give offerings to God. One is out of thanksgiving, the other of obligation. The one with sacrificial thanksgiving is received, the one from dutiful obligation is rejected. God’s rejection of Cain’s offering might have moved him to make a course correction. Instead it moved him to kill his brother.


God continued to be present to Cain, exhorting him to make the course correction — even after killing his brother. Not only does God continue to love Cain, He even marks him to protect him.


In all of His dealings with man . . .


There is His presence . . . and there is His gift of free will.


There is His word . . . and the gift of hearing . . . or not.


He always allows us the choice: to listen or to continue laboring our own way.



God gives signs everywhere. Signs pointing to His love. Waking up in the morning, breathing, a sunrise, a smile . . . Water. Wonder. Weather. His word.


We all need to SEE the SIGNS God sends and LISTEN to His WORDS. (What GRACE! They are EVERYWHERE! We cannot miss them if we are looking and listening!)
{Matthew 24:3; Matthew 24:6; Matthew 24:7; Matthew 24:8; Matthew 24:42}

Even as we wrap up savoring Christmas with our families, we turn on the news and hear of the increasing evil in the world. We might tune it out for a time, but tune in, and it’s unavoidable.


The report of the annual New Year address by the leader of North Korea . . . he says, “I have a nuclear button on my desk.” This is altogether unsettling, and yet we might be so apathetic to all the noise and dark reports online, that we think little of the words of an unstable man . . .


On this second day of 2018, after reading the pronounced curse and the promised blessing of Immanuel, (and seeing it reflected on the news) I read it in Psalm 2, “the Lord laughs at him:”

Why do the nations conspire
and the peoples plot in vain?
The kings of the earth rise up
and the rulers band together
against the Lord and against his anointed, saying,
“Let us break their chains
and throw off their shackles.”

The One enthroned in heaven laughs;
    the Lord scoffs at them.
He rebukes them in his anger
    and terrifies them in his wrath, saying,
“I have installed my king
    on Zion, my holy mountain.”
I will proclaim the Lord’s decree:
He said to me, “You are my son;
    today I have become your father.
Ask me,
and I will make the nations your inheritance,
the ends of the earth your possession.
You will break them with a rod of iron;
you will dash them to pieces like pottery.”
Therefore, you kings, be wise;
be warned, you rulers of the earth.
Serve the Lord with fear
and celebrate his rule with trembling.
Kiss his son, or he will be angry
and your way will lead to your destruction,
for his wrath can flare up in a moment.
Blessed are all who take refuge in him.

Not only does God laugh at him, but He invites — even this evil leader — to heed His warning and to turn to God, serve Him with fear, and celebrate His authority with trembling. God offers to be a refuge and to bless all who turn to Him. This is our Almighty King!


This is Immanuel -- King of the World! Ruler of Nations! Lord of Life! Light of the World! Refuge for the humble, Opposer of the proud. Rescuer of the broken, Ruler of us all.
May we heed His invitation to turn to Him and be saved! May we take His offering to taste Him and savor His light!
The Light of the World is here and He has overcome the snake! He sweetens our labor, and walks with us through the darkness, ensuring that we will make it Home when we take refuge in Him.
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