When Religious Humor Isn't Funny Anymore - Beliefnet.com

When Religious Humor Isn't Funny Anymore

BY: Douglas Todd
Religion News Service

Vancouver, British Columbia -- Christian joke: "Presbyterians feel guilty about things they haven't even done." Jewish joke: "In the Bible, we're the chosen people. In the locker room, we're the last-chosen people." Muslim joke: "Our family has four women who wear veils. We all share the same bus pass."

Many people might find these jokes offensive. Religion-based humor is the touchiest. Anyone who ventures into it must walk an exceedingly fine line -- especially in the middle of a conflict over terrorism that has religious overtones.

Just ask Roy Peterson, award-winning editorial cartoonist for Canada's Southam News Service. He has just been hit by a petition signed by more than 300 angry Muslims. Peterson's contentious cartoon portrays terrorist Osama bin Laden pointing a video-camera at himself and saying: "Yo, Allah! Smile, we're on candid camera." A voice from above replies: "...we?"

Muslims complained the Peterson cartoon fails to be "unquestionably deferential" to the divine and "insults Islam and injures the feelings of Muslims," dragging God down to the foible-ridden level of humans. Peterson, however, says he aimed his cartoon solely at bin Laden, whom he considers a "zealot." He purposely wanted to show there was no connection between terrorism and the deity. "But in the game of editorial cartooning, you're not going to please everyone," Peterson said, noting he's offended conservative Christians in the past.

In the past, religious people would laugh about their religion only among themselves. But more are taking their humor out into the wider society. While Jewish comics have been in the entertainment industry for decades, Christian comics are now popping up all over, with some moving into secular venues. Meanwhile, a female Muslim stand-up comic in England, probably the only one in the world, is making a big splash in the West.

Do members of some religions have a stronger sense of humor than others? In Vancouver, Regent College professor John Stackhouse, who specializes in theology and culture, says Jews are the most open about religious humor, Muslims the least receptive to it, and Christians somewhere in the middle. Generalizing about the three major monotheistic religions, Stackhouse said Jews have a tradition of struggling in a close relationship with God -- willing to argue, complain and make wisecracks with the divine. Christians are not quite there yet. However, Stackhouse said.

Christians, unlike Muslims and Jews, don't object to visual representations of the deity, believing God became human in the person of Jesus Christ. That also connects God to human vulnerability, which is often pretty funny.

The world's one-billion Muslims are not all humorless, Stackhouse says, although many are sensitive because they feel under attack by the West. Muslims also see the divine as utterly transcendent, a being who cannot be portrayed in human terms -- including chatting with bin Laden.

It's not as if Christians don't often get offended by satire, though. Stackhouse, an evangelical Christian, remembers getting riled by a newspaper cartoon that showed Jesus hanging on the cross, remarking to those below: "Oh, Peter, I can see your house from up here." Christians hate seeing Jesus trivialized, Stackhouse said. "Christians don't want to see anything that cuts too close to the heart of piety." Still, Stackhouse said, if Peterson's cartoon had portrayed a sinful Christian talking to God, he would not have been offended. "It's the kind of joke Christians could go for. It makes God look good. The joke's on us."

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