A recent stand-up show led me to this funny fellow…
PS: The “French jokes” get unusual amounts of laughter because he’s performing in Montreal.
A recent stand-up show led me to this funny fellow…
PS: The “French jokes” get unusual amounts of laughter because he’s performing in Montreal.
This one’s surely done a lap or two of the cyber-track, but Steve put it back on my radar. So I put it past your eyes in case you haven’t had this joy yet. A few of them actually make me laugh out loud. And no, I did not, nor will I ever, write LOL.
If you’ve ever found that perfect illustration to make a point, or heard such an analogy shared, then you know the power that is found there. These ones… not so much.
Actual Analogies and Metaphors Found in High School Essays (Though I doubt this to be true, these are funny anyway):
1. Her face was a perfect oval, like a circle that had its two sides gently compressed by a Thigh Master.
2. His thoughts tumbled in his head, making and breaking alliances like underpants in a dryer without Cling Free.
3. He spoke with the wisdom that can only come from experience, like a guy who went blind because he looked at a solar eclipse without one of those boxes with a pinhole in it and now goes around the country speaking at high schools about the dangers of looking at a solar eclipse without one of those boxes with a pinhole in it.
4. She grew on him like she was a colony of E. Coli and he was room-temperature Canadian beef.
5. She had a deep, throaty, genuine laugh, like that sound a dog makes just before it throws up.
6. Her vocabulary was as bad as, like, whatever.
7. He was as tall as a six-foot-three-inch tree.
8. The revelation that his marriage of 30 years had disintegrated because of his wife’s infidelity came as a rude shock, like a surcharge at a formerly surcharge-free ATM.
9. The little boat gently drifted across the pond exactly the way a bowling ball wouldn’t.
10. McBride fell 12 stories, hitting the pavement like a Hefty bag filled with vegetable soup.
11. From the attic came an unearthly howl. The whole scene had an eerie,surreal quality, like when you’re on vacation in another city and Jeopardy comes on at 7:00 p.m. instead of 7:30.
12. Her hair glistened in the rain like a nose hair after a sneeze.
13. The hailstones leaped from the pavement, just like maggots when you fry them in hot grease.
14. Long separated by cruel fate, the star-crossed lovers raced across the grassy field toward each other like two freight trains, one having left Cleveland at 6:36 p.m. traveling at 55 mph, the other from Topeka at4:19 p.m. at a speed of 35 mph.
15. They lived in a typical suburban neighborhood with picket fences that resembled Nancy Kerrigan’s teeth.
16. John and Mary had never met. They were like two hummingbirds who had also never met.
17. He fell for her like his heart was a mob informant and she was the East River.
18. Even in his last years, Grandpappy had a mind like a steel trap, only one that had been left out so long, it had rusted shut.
19. Shots rang out, as shots are wont to do.
20. The plan was simple, like my brother-in-law Phil. But unlike Phil,this plan just might work.
21. The young fighter had a hungry look, the kind you get from not eating for a while.
22. He was as lame as a duck. Not the metaphorical lame duck, either, but a real duck that was actually lame…maybe from stepping on a land mine or something.
23. The ballerina rose gracefully en pointe and extended one slender leg behind her, like a dog at a fire hydrant.
24. It was an American tradition, like fathers chasing kids around with power tools.
25. He was deeply in love. When she spoke, he thought he heard bells, as if she were a garbage truck backing up.
26. Her eyes were like limpid pools, only they had forgotten to put in any pH cleanser.
27. She walked into my office like a centipede with 98 missing legs.
28. It hurt the way your tongue hurts after you accidentally staple it to the wall.
Any favourites?
A hundred and some pages into Yancey’s book, here are a few quotes worth sharing…
Walter Wink:
“Biblical prayer is impertinent, persistent, shameless, indecorous. It is more like haggling in an outdoor bazaar than the polite monologues of the church.”
Soren Kierkegaard:
“The true relation in prayer is not when God hears what we prayed for, but when the person praying continues to pray until he is the one who hears, who hears what God wills.”
Eugene Peterson:
“Be slow to pray. Praying puts us at risk of getting involved with God’s conditions…. Praying most often doesn’t get us what we want but what God wants, something quite at variance with what we conceive to be in our best interests. And when we realize what is going on, it is often too late to go back.”
Karl Barth:
“To clasp the hands in prayer is the beginning of an uprising against the disorder of the world.”
Dietrich Bonhoeffer:
“A day without morning and evening prayers and personal intercessions is actually a day without meaning or importance.”
“Whatever this guy is getting paid, it’s not enough!”
That is a blatant thievery from Benji and Ev. And truer words were never written. This has nearly put my wife on the floor with laughter, so I’m simply spreading the head-shaking joy…
Revelation 4-5 describe a vision of God’s throne around which are crowded a host of worshipers. In speaking of this passage and its image of worship, Eugene Peterson puts these thoughts out there…
“In worship God gathers his people to himself as center. Worship is a meeting at the center so that our live are centered in God and not lived eccentrically. We worship so that we live in response to and from this center, the living God. Failure to worship consigns us to a life of spasms and jerks, at the mercy of every advertisement, every seduction, every siren. Without worship we live manipulated and manipulating lives. We move in either frightened panic or deluded lethargy as we are, in turn, alarmed by spectres and soothed by placebos. If there is no center, there is no circumference. People who do not worship are swept into a vast restlessness, epidemic in the world, with no steady direction and no sustaining purpose.” (taken from “Reverse Thunder”, p. 60)
Worship as more than ritual, music, or sermon… Eugene, surely you jest! No, surely you’re dead on! And I need some of that in my life pretty much every day I wake up.
On the other days, I can get by without it.