In its original broadcast, "Homer the Heretic" finished 36th in ratings for the week of October 5–11, 1992, with a
Nielsen rating of 12.0, equivalent to approximately 11.2 million viewing households. It was the second highest-rated show on the Fox network that week, following
Married… with Children.
Gary Russell and
Gareth Roberts, the authors of the book ''I Can't Believe It's a Bigger and Better Updated Unofficial Simpsons Guide'', loved the episode. They described it as "A brilliant episode, underlining everything that The Simpsons is about. Homer hates church, Marge wants the kids to see Homer as an example, and everyone pulls together in the end. Good stuff, and if God really is like that, he's a groovy kind of guy." When asked to pick his favorite season out of
The Simpsons seasons
one through
twenty, Paul Lane of the
Niagara Gazette picked season four and highlighted "
Brother from the Same Planet" and "
Mr. Plow" which he called "excellent", along with "the sweetly funny" "
Lisa's First Word", and "Homer the Heretic". In 2004,
ESPN.com released a list of the Top 100
Simpsons sport moments, ranking
Benjamin Franklin and
Jimi Hendrix's
air hockey game, a scene from the episode, at #83. The episode's reference to
Risky Business was named the 45th greatest film reference in the history of the show by
Total Film's Nathan Ditum.
Dan Castellaneta, the voice of Homer, named it his favorite episode of the show together with "
Simpson and Delilah" and "
Lisa's Substitute". When
The Simpsons began streaming on
Disney+ in 2019, former
Simpsons writer and executive producer
Bill Oakley named this one of the best classic
Simpsons episodes to watch on the service. The writers of the Fox program
King of the Hill put "Homer the Heretic" among the five best episodes of
The Simpsons, including "
Brother from the Same Planet", "
Lisa's Wedding", "
Lisa's Substitute", and "
Behind the Laughter". Nathan Rabin writes: "For all its good-natured heresy, 'Homer The Heretic' is respectful enough toward religion to put the moral of the episode in Reverend Lovejoy’s mouth when he tells Homer that God was 'working in the hearts of your neighbors when they came to your aid, be they Christian, Jew, or miscellaneous.' Many episodes of The Simpsons center around Homer and Marge’s marriage being tested and ultimately reaffirmed. In 'Homer The Heretic' it’s Homer’s faith that is aggressively tested before ultimately being reaffirmed. The strength and value of religion, the episode argues, ultimately lies not in its power to force people to follow arbitrary rules or go to a building every Sunday but rather in its capacity for teaching people to listen to their better angels and love and serve their fellow man. That makes 'Homer The Heretic' not just funny but also surprisingly profound." ==References==