When Ricky Gervais signed off from his caustic performance at the recent Golden Globe Awards, God was among those he thanked.
" Thank you to God for making me an atheist," the comedian quipped.
On his new CNN show, Piers Morgan challenged his fellow Brit on the comment - arguing that the joke was "nearest the knuckle" for Americans who hold faith dear.
Check out the conversation that followed between Morgan (a self-professed Catholic) and Gervais (a self-professed atheist).
Two cuts of the interview:
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CpsR1FEInK8]
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5wGVLf_x4LE&feature=watch_response]
January 21, 2011 05:12
By George Matysek

Helen Nale, right, enjoys conversation with her daughter, Helen Valley. Nale believes she caught a glimpse of heaven after a near-death experience. (CR Staff/Owen Sweeney III)
Everyone has seen stories on television about people who believe they died and went to heaven. They often speak of "seeing light at the end of a tunnel," being reunited with deceased relatives and returning to earth for unfinished business.
A few days before Christmas, I met one of them.
Helen Nale, a 94-year-old parishioner of St. Andrew by the Bay in Annapolis, suffered a stroke in early December. At the hospital, doctors told her family she was dying. She even began a "death rattle."
But, for some unknown reason, Nale's health made a sudden and dramatic turnaround. She awoke from a coma, said some prayers and was eventually released.
Nale doesn't remember much of what happened in the hospital that day because she believes she was in a better place. She says she caught a glimpse of heaven and returned to earth with a mission to help some family members return to church.
Nale didn't see any bright lights in the next world, but she told me a lot about winged angels with curly hair, happy reunions with family members, magnificent buildings and an overwhelming feeling of happiness.
"It was all a beautiful thing to be with God and the angels," she said.
Helen Valley, Nale's daughter and a fellow St. Andrew parishioner, said her mother has a "new lease on life" and that her experience has inspired the entire family.
Skeptics might say there's a neurochemical explanation for Nale's experience - that her brain was under stress and released chemicals that caused hallucinations. Maybe. Talk to Nale, however, and you will meet a woman who has no doubt about experiencing God's profound love in a deeply personal way.
You can read the story here at The Catholic Review.
What do you think?
December 31, 2010 06:58
By George Matysek