A Blessing From The Lord

2020Reaction image / image macrosemi-active

Also known as: A Blessing From The Lord · Lancelot Blessing Meme

A Blessing From The Lord is a 2020 reaction meme featuring John Cleese as Sir Lancelot from Monty Python and the Holy Grail, deployed sarcastically to celebrate mundane or underwhelming accomplishments.

"A Blessing From The Lord!" is a reaction image meme featuring a still of John Cleese as Sir Lancelot from the 1975 film *Monty Python and the Holy Grail*. The format pairs the screenshot with a top caption describing something positively received, using Lancelot's exclamation as a punchline expressing exaggerated gratitude. It broke out on Reddit's r/dankmemes in March 2020 and quickly picked up steam across meme communities, often deployed sarcastically for mundane or underwhelming situations2.

TL;DR

"A Blessing From The Lord!" is a reaction image meme featuring a still of John Cleese as Sir Lancelot from the 1975 film *Monty Python and the Holy Grail*.

Overview

The meme uses a screencap of John Cleese's Sir Lancelot looking upward with a reverent expression, paired with the caption "A blessing from The Lord!" The standard format places a setup line above the image describing a situation where someone receives something ordinary or expected, and the Lancelot image below acts as an over-the-top grateful reaction2. The humor comes from the gap between the trivial thing being described and Lancelot's deadly serious religious awe. It works both sincerely, for genuinely good news, and sarcastically, for things that don't warrant divine-level appreciation.

The source material comes from *Monty Python and the Holy Grail*, released on April 3, 19752. At approximately the 24:50 mark, the Knights of the Round Table encounter God, who commands King Arthur to seek the Holy Grail. Sir Lancelot, played by John Cleese, responds with the line: "A blessing. A blessing from The Lord!"2 The scene is a classic example of Monty Python's approach to religious satire, playing the knights' earnest reverence against the absurdity of the situation1.

The scene sat in the broader Monty Python quote library for decades before someone turned it into a meme template. On March 6, 2020, Reddit user SierraFlamingoHotel posted an image macro to r/dankmemes with the top caption "My dog as I pour him the same food he's eaten 2555 times" above the Lancelot still2. The post pulled in over 106,000 upvotes within nine months. On the same day, Imgur user OctopussSevenTwo uploaded the isolated image as a blank template, collecting over 2,400 upvotes2.

Origin & Background

Platform
Reddit (r/dankmemes)
Key People
SierraFlamingoHotel, John Cleese
Date
2020 (meme format); 1975 (source film)
Year
2020

The source material comes from *Monty Python and the Holy Grail*, released on April 3, 1975. At approximately the 24:50 mark, the Knights of the Round Table encounter God, who commands King Arthur to seek the Holy Grail. Sir Lancelot, played by John Cleese, responds with the line: "A blessing. A blessing from The Lord!" The scene is a classic example of Monty Python's approach to religious satire, playing the knights' earnest reverence against the absurdity of the situation.

The scene sat in the broader Monty Python quote library for decades before someone turned it into a meme template. On March 6, 2020, Reddit user SierraFlamingoHotel posted an image macro to r/dankmemes with the top caption "My dog as I pour him the same food he's eaten 2555 times" above the Lancelot still. The post pulled in over 106,000 upvotes within nine months. On the same day, Imgur user OctopussSevenTwo uploaded the isolated image as a blank template, collecting over 2,400 upvotes.

How It Spread

The meme gained traction fast after its March 2020 debut. On March 28, 2020, Reddit user LeGend4LEX-- posted a new version to r/dankmemes that picked up over 47,700 upvotes within eight months. The format was simple enough to riff on endlessly: any situation where gratitude (real or ironic) fit the punchline.

By late summer 2020, the meme had spread beyond r/dankmemes. On August 27, user claxonator posted a version to r/me_irl, earning over 1,200 upvotes. One of the biggest hits came on September 30, when SteelPro43 used the format on r/dankmemes to mock Apple for borrowing Android features, pulling in over 93,900 upvotes. That post showed the template's versatility. It could handle tech commentary, pet humor, gaming wins, and pretty much anything where someone wanted to express "finally, something good."

The meme also saw use in comment sections as a standalone reaction image, stripped of any top caption, functioning as a quick shorthand for approval or gratitude.

How to Use This Meme

The format follows a straightforward two-part structure:

1

Top text or caption: Describe a situation where someone receives or encounters something. This is typically either genuinely great or hilariously mundane. Common setups include pets getting food, small everyday wins, or tech companies doing the bare minimum.

2

Bottom image: The still of Sir Lancelot looking skyward with the implicit or explicit caption "A blessing from The Lord!"

Cultural Impact

As a Monty Python meme, "A Blessing From The Lord!" joins a long tradition of Holy Grail quotes getting recycled online, alongside "Tis but a scratch" and the Black Knight scene. Monty Python's religious comedy has been studied for how it uses biblical language and liturgical tone as comedic devices. The troupe's willingness to play with sacred themes while keeping the humor accessible helped their material stay relevant across generations of internet users.

The meme's 2020 breakout coincided with the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, a period when meme production and consumption spiked across Reddit and other platforms. The simple, feel-good nature of the format made it an easy pick for communities looking for light humor during a heavy time.

Fun Facts

The original scene happens at the 24:50 mark of *Monty Python and the Holy Grail*, making it a relatively deep cut compared to more famous Holy Grail quotes.

The first meme post and the first blank template upload both happened on the exact same day, March 6, 2020.

The Apple vs. Android version from September 2020 nearly matched the original post's virality, hitting over 93,900 upvotes.

John Cleese's delivery in the film is intentionally overblown, mimicking the kind of earnest religious reverence that Monty Python regularly sent up throughout their career.

Frequently Asked Questions

A Blessing From The Lord

2020Reaction image / image macrosemi-active

Also known as: A Blessing From The Lord · Lancelot Blessing Meme

A Blessing From The Lord is a 2020 reaction meme featuring John Cleese as Sir Lancelot from Monty Python and the Holy Grail, deployed sarcastically to celebrate mundane or underwhelming accomplishments.

"A Blessing From The Lord!" is a reaction image meme featuring a still of John Cleese as Sir Lancelot from the 1975 film *Monty Python and the Holy Grail*. The format pairs the screenshot with a top caption describing something positively received, using Lancelot's exclamation as a punchline expressing exaggerated gratitude. It broke out on Reddit's r/dankmemes in March 2020 and quickly picked up steam across meme communities, often deployed sarcastically for mundane or underwhelming situations.

TL;DR

"A Blessing From The Lord!" is a reaction image meme featuring a still of John Cleese as Sir Lancelot from the 1975 film *Monty Python and the Holy Grail*.

Overview

The meme uses a screencap of John Cleese's Sir Lancelot looking upward with a reverent expression, paired with the caption "A blessing from The Lord!" The standard format places a setup line above the image describing a situation where someone receives something ordinary or expected, and the Lancelot image below acts as an over-the-top grateful reaction. The humor comes from the gap between the trivial thing being described and Lancelot's deadly serious religious awe. It works both sincerely, for genuinely good news, and sarcastically, for things that don't warrant divine-level appreciation.

The source material comes from *Monty Python and the Holy Grail*, released on April 3, 1975. At approximately the 24:50 mark, the Knights of the Round Table encounter God, who commands King Arthur to seek the Holy Grail. Sir Lancelot, played by John Cleese, responds with the line: "A blessing. A blessing from The Lord!" The scene is a classic example of Monty Python's approach to religious satire, playing the knights' earnest reverence against the absurdity of the situation.

The scene sat in the broader Monty Python quote library for decades before someone turned it into a meme template. On March 6, 2020, Reddit user SierraFlamingoHotel posted an image macro to r/dankmemes with the top caption "My dog as I pour him the same food he's eaten 2555 times" above the Lancelot still. The post pulled in over 106,000 upvotes within nine months. On the same day, Imgur user OctopussSevenTwo uploaded the isolated image as a blank template, collecting over 2,400 upvotes.

Origin & Background

Platform
Reddit (r/dankmemes)
Key People
SierraFlamingoHotel, John Cleese
Date
2020 (meme format); 1975 (source film)
Year
2020

The source material comes from *Monty Python and the Holy Grail*, released on April 3, 1975. At approximately the 24:50 mark, the Knights of the Round Table encounter God, who commands King Arthur to seek the Holy Grail. Sir Lancelot, played by John Cleese, responds with the line: "A blessing. A blessing from The Lord!" The scene is a classic example of Monty Python's approach to religious satire, playing the knights' earnest reverence against the absurdity of the situation.

The scene sat in the broader Monty Python quote library for decades before someone turned it into a meme template. On March 6, 2020, Reddit user SierraFlamingoHotel posted an image macro to r/dankmemes with the top caption "My dog as I pour him the same food he's eaten 2555 times" above the Lancelot still. The post pulled in over 106,000 upvotes within nine months. On the same day, Imgur user OctopussSevenTwo uploaded the isolated image as a blank template, collecting over 2,400 upvotes.

How It Spread

The meme gained traction fast after its March 2020 debut. On March 28, 2020, Reddit user LeGend4LEX-- posted a new version to r/dankmemes that picked up over 47,700 upvotes within eight months. The format was simple enough to riff on endlessly: any situation where gratitude (real or ironic) fit the punchline.

By late summer 2020, the meme had spread beyond r/dankmemes. On August 27, user claxonator posted a version to r/me_irl, earning over 1,200 upvotes. One of the biggest hits came on September 30, when SteelPro43 used the format on r/dankmemes to mock Apple for borrowing Android features, pulling in over 93,900 upvotes. That post showed the template's versatility. It could handle tech commentary, pet humor, gaming wins, and pretty much anything where someone wanted to express "finally, something good."

The meme also saw use in comment sections as a standalone reaction image, stripped of any top caption, functioning as a quick shorthand for approval or gratitude.

How to Use This Meme

The format follows a straightforward two-part structure:

1

Top text or caption: Describe a situation where someone receives or encounters something. This is typically either genuinely great or hilariously mundane. Common setups include pets getting food, small everyday wins, or tech companies doing the bare minimum.

2

Bottom image: The still of Sir Lancelot looking skyward with the implicit or explicit caption "A blessing from The Lord!"

Cultural Impact

As a Monty Python meme, "A Blessing From The Lord!" joins a long tradition of Holy Grail quotes getting recycled online, alongside "Tis but a scratch" and the Black Knight scene. Monty Python's religious comedy has been studied for how it uses biblical language and liturgical tone as comedic devices. The troupe's willingness to play with sacred themes while keeping the humor accessible helped their material stay relevant across generations of internet users.

The meme's 2020 breakout coincided with the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, a period when meme production and consumption spiked across Reddit and other platforms. The simple, feel-good nature of the format made it an easy pick for communities looking for light humor during a heavy time.

Fun Facts

The original scene happens at the 24:50 mark of *Monty Python and the Holy Grail*, making it a relatively deep cut compared to more famous Holy Grail quotes.

The first meme post and the first blank template upload both happened on the exact same day, March 6, 2020.

The Apple vs. Android version from September 2020 nearly matched the original post's virality, hitting over 93,900 upvotes.

John Cleese's delivery in the film is intentionally overblown, mimicking the kind of earnest religious reverence that Monty Python regularly sent up throughout their career.

Frequently Asked Questions