Dear Reader,
A friend recently shared with me a quote from theologian Reinhold Niebuhr:
“Humor is a prelude to faith, and laughter is the beginning of prayer.”
At first reading, I found the quote somewhat shallow.
After all, laughter alone does not make us spiritual.
Many laugh to avoid pain.
Others laugh to avoid truth.
Yet the more I reflected on his words, the more I began to sense there might be something deeper hidden beneath them.
Perhaps true laughter has less to do with amusement and more to do with humility.
There are moments in life when we become so serious, so burdened, so certain of ourselves, that we lose the ability to see clearly. We begin defending our pride, protecting our image, and clinging tightly to the belief that we are in control.
Then suddenly, through grace, honesty, friendship, or even recovery, we catch sight of ourselves as we truly are.
Not worthless.
Not condemned.
Simply human.
And sometimes the first healthy response to that discovery is not despair—but a quiet smile.
Not mocking laughter.
Not careless laughter.
But the kind that softens the heart and allows us to breathe again.
The scriptures seem to point toward this same spirit when Jesus taught:
“Verily I say unto you, Except ye be converted, and become as little children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven.”
— Matthew 18:3
Children possess something many adults slowly lose.
Wonder.
Teachability.
Trust.
The ability to begin again after failure.
A child can laugh honestly because a child has not yet fully learned the exhausting burden of pretending to be greater than they are.
Christ continues:
“Whosoever therefore shall humble himself as this little child, the same is greatest in the kingdom of heaven.”
— Matthew 18:4
Humility may be one of the great doorways to both faith and prayer.
Recovery teaches something remarkably similar.
Many of us arrive spiritually exhausted—trying to manage life through fear, pride, resentment, or self-reliance. Then one day, often in the presence of others equally broken, we finally let down our guard. We laugh at our own thinking. We admit we do not have all the answers. And strangely, in that moment, we become more open to God than we were in all our striving.
Perhaps this is why Proverbs teaches:
“A merry heart doeth good like a medicine.”
— Proverbs 17:22
Not because laughter removes suffering, but because humility helps heal the soul carrying it.
Maybe Niebuhr’s insight was never really about comedy at all.
Maybe it was about the beautiful moment when the human heart stops pretending, becomes teachable again, and quietly turns itself toward God like a little child.
Amen





