Wayne
Tempus faciendi, Domine.
Back when I was on the receiving end of one fellow's practical jokes, I got to thinking about how a Christian might conduct a practical joke.
Rule no. 1 - the joker cannot harm and must actually benefit the jokee. That makes it fairly difficult to pull off a good joke, but like all art, rules and constraint make for better results.
Example 1: I thought of getting some seminary students to sneak over to the local Lutheran seminary to plant tulips in the flower beds. Never pulled that one off.
2: Or to get the maintenance man off campus for a day and nicely repaint his VW, such that when he returned, he wouldn't find it in the parking lot. Too expensive, plus you're taking another's property into your own hands and there's liability there.
3: Then more recently I hit on the idea of the never ending jar of jam, soda or condiments, where you keep refilling the jokee's container from some off-site supply. He keeps using it, but it never runs out.
Care to share other ideas that fit within the rule?
Rule no. 1 - the joker cannot harm and must actually benefit the jokee. That makes it fairly difficult to pull off a good joke, but like all art, rules and constraint make for better results.
Example 1: I thought of getting some seminary students to sneak over to the local Lutheran seminary to plant tulips in the flower beds. Never pulled that one off.
2: Or to get the maintenance man off campus for a day and nicely repaint his VW, such that when he returned, he wouldn't find it in the parking lot. Too expensive, plus you're taking another's property into your own hands and there's liability there.
3: Then more recently I hit on the idea of the never ending jar of jam, soda or condiments, where you keep refilling the jokee's container from some off-site supply. He keeps using it, but it never runs out.
Care to share other ideas that fit within the rule?