Christianity For Modern Pagans: Wretchedness and The Paradox of Greatness and Wretchedness

My favorite of Pas­cal’s thoughts.

Blog read­ers: Chi Alpha @ Stan­ford is engag­ing in our annu­al sum­mer read­ing project. As we read through an anno­tat­ed trans­la­tion of Pascal’s Pensees called Chris­tian­i­ty For Mod­ern Pagans, I’ll post the thoughts I’m email­ing the stu­dents here (which will large­ly con­sist of excerpts I found insight­ful). They are all tagged sum­mer-read­ing-project-2020. The read­ing sched­ule is online.

This read­ing includes the line from Pas­cal that has shaped my thought more than any oth­er of his, “There is enough light for those who desire only to see, and enough dark­ness for those of a con­trary dis­po­si­tion” (Pas­cal, Pensee 149, page 69). It’s sim­ple obser­va­tion that explains some­thing we observe every day at Stan­ford: the coex­is­tence of smart peo­ple who think God’s exis­tence is blind­ing­ly obvi­ous along­side smart peo­ple who think that God’s nonex­is­tence is blind­ing­ly obvi­ous.

I think about this obser­va­tion fre­quent­ly, and I have come to believe that such exquis­ite bal­ance is itself evi­dence of a mas­ter plan­ner at work behind the scenes. If a flipped coin land­ed on its edge once, we would be astound­ed. If it land­ed on its edge repeat­ed­ly, we would be sure that the coin was rigged. Pas­cal’s point is that real­i­ty is rigged in such a way that strong cas­es can be made for faith and for doubt. Pay atten­tion the next time there is a sig­nif­i­cant sci­en­tif­ic dis­cov­ery in an area you might expect to clar­i­fy the exis­tence of God, you will see that the­ists and athe­ists alike rejoice in the dis­cov­ery and write about it with great glee. The coin will have land­ed on its edge once again.

Why would God arrange real­i­ty this way? To reveal our heart. As Pas­cal said ear­li­er in the same Pensee:

‘If he had wished to over­come the obsti­na­cy of the most hard­ened, he could have done so by reveal­ing him­self to them so plain­ly that they could not doubt the truth of his essence, as he will appear on the last day with such thun­der and light­ning and such con­vul­sions of nature that the dead will rise up and the blind­est will see him. This is not the way he wished to appear when he came in mild­ness, because so many men had shown them­selves unwor­thy of his clemen­cy, that he wished to deprive them of the good they did not desire. It was there­fore not right that he should appear in a man­ner man­i­fest­ly divine and absolute­ly capa­ble of con­vinc­ing all men, but nei­ther was it right that his com­ing should be so hid­den that he could not be rec­og­nized by those who sin­cere­ly sought him.

Pas­cal, Pensee 149, page 68

As I heard a pas­tor say once, “You get what you want in eter­ni­ty. Do you want God? You go to Heav­en where He dwells. Do you not want God? You will be free of Him for­ev­er and will go to Hell where He is not.”

Oth­er sec­tions that stuck with me:

It is instruc­tive to com­pare Job and Eccle­si­astes. For this is the com­par­i­son between ancient and mod­ern man. Eccle­si­astes, like mod­ern man, has every­thing and yet has noth­ing because it is only “van­i­ty”. Job, like ancient man, has noth­ing but has every­thing because he has God.

Kreeft’s com­men­tary on Pensee 403, page 49

The two most life-chang­ing rev­o­lu­tions in mod­ern times were the sci­en­tif­ic-indus­tri­al rev­o­lu­tion, which taught man to live and think abstract­ly, like an angel; and the sex­u­al rev­o­lu­tion, which taught man to live and think like an ani­mal. The first knows only the head, the sec­ond knows only the hor­mones. Nei­ther knows the heart.

Kreeft’s com­men­tary on Pensees 678 & 121, page 53

Man’s great­ness is so obvi­ous that it can even be deduced from his wretched­ness, for what is nature in ani­mals we call wretched­ness in man, thus rec­og­niz­ing that, if his nature is today like that of the ani­mals, he must have fall­en from some bet­ter state which was once his own…. Who would think him­self unhap­py if he had only one mouth and who would not if he had only one eye? It has prob­a­bly nev­er occurred to any­one to be dis­tressed at not hav­ing three eyes, but those who have none are incon­solable.

Pas­cal, Pensee 117, page 59

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