 
Growing in Christ - Meditation
Meditation #105, July, 2018.
Blaise Pascal
As you do not know 
the way the spirit comes to the bones in the womb of a woman with child, so you 
do not know the work of God who makes everything. Ecclesiastes 11:5 (ESV).
The above verse is a humbling reminder that there is much 
about God we simply do not know or will ever know. At the same time it reminds 
us that the everyday occurrence of a child being born is miraculous.
Not everyone sees this.
Where do we begin? When we are talking to our beloved 
non-Christian friends and neighbors, where do we begin? How do we communicate 
the profundity of scripture? How do we explain the power of prayer? How do we 
present the joy of fellowship? Above all, how do we discuss the vital, robust 
gift of hope for eternal life?
An evangelist in the twenty-first century has a bewildering 
array of challenges, not least of which is the endless array of distractions 
that pull our friends and neighbors everywhere except the direction of the local 
church. We admire and enjoy technology, but mainly because it provides us with 
inane entertainments like video games. We consider ourselves to be logical 
because we have figured out how to take instructions from a GPS device. We enjoy 
the latest in telephone gadgetry so that we can carry on endless conversations 
about everything, all the time, with everyone; but are we ever saying anything? 
We are an affluent society but we endure astonishing statistics for suicide, 
depression and drug and alcohol abuse. Celebrities, the richest and seemingly 
best-loved people among us, are not immune from those diseases of 
self-destruction. Our non-Christian friends receive plenty of information about 
the church—from the media, whenever there is a controversy, or a personal 
failure of a leader. They generally do not receive any positive information by 
actual attendance, or biblical instruction, or encouragement from peers.
We are endlessly busy but do ever stop to think? From time to 
time we are reminded of the relentless passing of time and the shortness of our 
mortal lives. 
Blaise Pascal was born in 1623. In France at that time there 
was considerable religious controversy. But Pascal was neither a politician nor 
a priest—he was a mathematician. He applied his gift of logical thinking to the 
very basic questions of the existence of God and the reasonableness of belief. 
His book, Pensees (Thoughts),
[1] covers a great many topics pertaining to 
Christian faith, but before anything else, Pascal takes pains to point out the 
inherent misery of the human condition without belief in God:
"We do not require great education of the mind to understand 
that here is no real and lasting satisfaction; that our pleasures are only 
vanity; that our evils are infinite; and, lastly, that death, which threatens us 
every moment; must infallibly place us within a few years under the dreadful 
necessity of being forever either annihilated or unhappy." (Page 70, para. 194).
Pascal goes on, trying to articulate the mindset of someone 
who does not care to enquire into the possibility of the saving grace of God:
"Perhaps I might find some solution to my doubts, but I will 
not take the trouble, nor take a step to seek it; and after treating with scorn 
those who are concerned with this care, I will go without foresight and without 
fear to try the great event, and let myself be led carelessly to death, 
uncertain of the eternity of my future state." (Page 71, para. 194).
Pascal is in turn rather scornful of those who think this way. 
He points out, with relentless logic, that the unreasonableness of unbelief 
helps to prove the very reasonableness of belief:
"In truth, it is the glory of religion to have for enemies 
men so 
unreasonable; and their opposition to it is so little dangerous that it serves, 
on the contrary, to establish its truths. For the Christian faith goes mainly to 
establish these two facts: the corruption of nature, and redemption by Jesus 
Christ. Now I contend that, if these men do not serve to prove the truth of the 
redemption by the holiness of their behavior, they at least serve admirably to 
show the corruption of nature by sentiments so unnatural." (Page 72, para. 194).
The corruption of nature, or in other words, humankind in its 
sinful state; explains so much. When we  try 
to speak up on behalf of Jesus Christ, we are doing no less than pitting 
ourselves against that very obstacle. That fact that we can do it at all we must 
credit to the Holy Spirit (Luke 12:12).
Some make a deliberate choice in choosing the agnostic road; 
others fail to make a choice, blinded by fear of controversy or commitment. But 
by failing to seek and accept the road of faith, they are making a decision by 
default, or omission. This might seem bewildering or unfair to some, but Pascal 
sums everything up with the language of a bet, or wager: 
"Let us weigh the gain and the loss in wagering that God is. 
Let us estimate these two chances. If   
you gain, you gain all; if you lose, you lose nothing. Wager, then, 
without hesitation that He is." (Page 83, para.233).
Yes, let us wager. Let us embrace the mystery and the joy of 
the gospel. Let us accept there is a transcendent meaning to our lives. Let us 
sense the love of God even as we try to love one another as Jesus would have us 
do. Let us exult in the beauty of the natural world, that beauty that begs for 
belief in a Creator. Let us have confidence in our foundational evidence, Holy 
Scripture, which tells a story too complex and wonderful to have been created by 
the human mind alone. Above all, let us turn away from apathy and despair and 
turn towards the joy and beauty of eternity.
Praise the Father, praise the Son, praise the Holy Spirit.
In faith and fellowship,
Patrick McKitrick
Outreach Canada Ministries
								
								
								
								
								[1] Blaise 
								Pascal, Pensees (London: Arcturus 
								Publishing Ltd.)2018.
