Pascal’s Wager
by Rudolph Lohse
Blaise Pascal, a prominent
French philosopher living in the skeptical age of the 17th century,
was the author of the Pensees in which he argued that reason alone could
never answer the question of whether God exists or not. Therefore he developed
his famous wager concerning the manner in which a person should best conduct
his life on earth in order to gain maximum happiness. At the far end of life,
Pascal said that a coin is being tossed that will come down heads (God) or
tails (no God). So how will you wager, i.e. how will you live your life in view
of the uncertainty of that final truth?
Pascal’s Wager answered that
central question by essentially claiming that:“It makes more
sense to believe in God than not to believe. If you believe, and God exists,
you will be rewarded in the afterlife. If you do not believe and He exists, you
will be punished for your disbelief. If He does not exist, you have lost
nothing either way.”
His
wager amounts to hedging your bets. As Pascal says, “I should be much more
afraid of not believing in God and then finding out that Christianity is true,
than of believing Christianity to be true and finding out that God did not
exist.”
We
can apply Pascal’s Wager specifically to a person contemplating embracing the
moral conduct demanded by the teachings of the orthodox Roman Catholic Church.
Although that person believes the evidence for the orthodox Roman Catholic
Church and its God is intellectually compelling beyond a reasonable doubt,
he may feel that it is not certain. The question therefore arises as to the way
in which the person should choose to live his life to gain the maximum
benefits. Here are his options and their consequences:
- If his belief in God is true and he follows the teachings of his Church, he will be rewarded with heaven. If he seriously violates Church teachings, he will be punished in hell.
- If his belief proves false, there is no eternity for him to lose, only the fleeting temporal pleasures of this world, which he has not embraced. However, even in this life, he still gains peace, hope, joy – the things that put smiles on the lips of martyrs.
From The Educated Catholic: Forever Catholic by Rudolph Lohse - orlandotruth@mail.com
Sorry tff topic but just wanted people to see what the streets of Paris and Germany are like now.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ju79YT_lBVI
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6peY9smzqRA