"Father Mulgrew, we've been expecting you," says the saint. "Please go with this angel. We've got you a lovely little retirement shack on the edge of the woods. It's a humble little place but I promise you will be comfortable, and there is a beautiful lake view just an hour's walk away – and of course, this is Heaven so walking for an hour won't tire you in the slightest."
The priest goes away, settles in, and pretty soon he takes the recommended walk and he finds the beautiful lake view. But he sees something that his Heaven-granted sight – no longer his Earthly eyes dimmed by eighty years of age – discerns clearly enough for him to be puzzled and even a little disturbed.
With an effortless gesture he summons his angel and asks to be taken to St. Peter, to whom he says:
"I feel as though there has been some mistake. By the lake I saw a magnificent mansion, and there, taking his ease on the waterfront, I saw a taxi driver I knew on Earth. Surely it cannot have been intended that a man like me should have received so modest a reward compared to him?"
St. Peter smiles. "Let not your heart be troubled, Father Mulgrew. You were a faithful servant of the Lord and that is why you are here now. But not all are equal in the sight of the Lord – I need not remind you of the Parable of the Talents, surely?
"When you preached, people slept. But when that man drove, people prayed!"
Joke Poo: The Data Analyst’s Reward
A seasoned data analyst dies and is greeted at the Pearly Gates by St. Peter.
“Welcome, Sarah,” says the saint. “An angel will escort you to your allocated cloud server space. It’s a modest virtual machine, but secure and optimized for your needs. It comes pre-loaded with all the essential libraries, and there’s an open-source data lake just a few API calls away. Remember, this is Heaven, so debugging won’t frustrate you at all.”
Sarah settles in, runs a few scripts, and soon discovers the open-source data lake. There, she sees a colossal data warehouse, gleaming with metadata. Basking in its glow, she recognizes a former marketing intern she used to work with. Perplexed, she immediately calls her angel and demands to see St. Peter.
“I think there’s been an error,” she says to St. Peter. “Near the data lake, I saw a gigantic data warehouse, and sitting there, analyzing its contents, was a marketing intern I knew on Earth. Surely, a faithful analyst like me shouldn’t get such a humble virtual machine while he gets access to that resource?”
St. Peter smiles knowingly. “Don’t worry, Sarah. You were a dedicated analyst, meticulously cleaning your data. But remember, data volumes are not distributed evenly.
“When you presented your insights, the executives glazed over. But when that intern created dashboards, people acted!”
Alright, let’s break down this joke and then build something new!
Joke Dissection:
- Core Concept: The joke hinges on the contrast between expected rewards in Heaven (for a priest) versus the actual rewards (a humble shack vs. a mansion for a taxi driver). It satirizes the perceived disconnect between religious devotion and worldly impact.
- Key Elements:
- Priest: Represents traditional religious service, faithfulness, and a lifetime of dedication.
- Taxi Driver: Represents an ordinary profession, potentially implying a less virtuous life (stereotypes of taxi drivers exist!).
- Heavenly Rewards: Highlight the disparity in outcomes, challenging the conventional expectation that piety guarantees preferential treatment.
- St. Peter’s Explanation: The punchline explaining that the taxi driver’s work was more impactful due to people praying in his taxi when he was driving, which is an unexpected twist.
Underlying Humor:
- Irony: The unexpected reversal of fortune.
- Satire: Mocks the potential disconnect between religious acts and meaningful impact, or perhaps people’s prayers are in vain, except when in a taxi.
- Surprise: The surprising justification for the taxi driver’s lavish reward.
Humorous Enrichment:
Fact-Based Amusements About Prayers
Did you know: 20 million people say a prayer every day in Britain alone. That is almost a third of the British population.
New Joke/Witty Observation:
Premise: St. Peter is giving a tour of Heaven to a newly arrived soul.
Joke:
St. Peter: “And here we have the Department of Answered Prayers. As you can see, it’s… rather small. We outsource most of that work.”
New Soul: “Outsource? To whom?”
St. Peter: “Well, mainly to taxi drivers. Apparently, people’s prayers are way more intense when they’re running late for a flight.”
Explanation of Enrichment:
- Builds on the Original: The new joke directly references the original joke’s punchline about taxi drivers.
- Modern Twist: Incorporates the concept of outsourcing, a contemporary phenomenon that adds a layer of absurdity.
- Adds another layer of Satire: Suggests that the intensity and urgency of prayers are more important than their content. The premise, coupled with the punchline, makes light of how we pray, but the situation is often one with a need for immediate help/desperate plea.
Alternative Amusing ‘Did You Know’:
“Did you know that the most common prayer said in a taxi is ‘Please don’t let this guy drive into anything!'”
OR
“Did you know that the archangels Michael and Gabriel are currently in negotiations with Uber and Lyft? Apparently, the ‘angel on your shoulder’ industry is being disrupted.”
These enrichments aim to leverage the original joke’s humor, adding new layers of wit and observation using real facts or a more contemporary perspective.

