Anyone who
has been around philosophical circles – or better yet, the apologetics movement
– has heard of Pascal’s Wager. Pascal tells us that the consequences of
rejecting Christ in this life are eternally dreadful, while the consequences of
following Christ in this life are eternally favorable. God may or may not
exist, but any wise person is going to bet on God.
There have
been a number of criticisms of Pascal’s Wager over the years. Which God should
we bet on? If we believe Pascal, then what do we do about Zeus, Apollo, and
Mars? What about Allah? The wager cannot specify the Christian God. Perhaps
most troubling, the wager makes the emphasis of the gospel lie in the some
future existence. It strips Christianity of its implications for here and now.
That’s where
Puddleglum comes in. In the Silver Chair, he and the children are in Underland.
In a moment of inspiration, he says, "Suppose we have only dreamed, or
made up, all of those things—trees and grass and sun and moon and stars and
Aslan himself. Suppose we have. Then all I can say is that, in that case, the
made-up things seem a good deal more important than the real ones."
Puddleglum
does not relegate faith in Aslan to a bet on the future life. He says belief in
Aslan and the world above are not only a future hope, they make life worth
living here and now. Belief has an enormous role in molding our behaviors right
now, and can provide profound meaning and purpose to our lives.
Maybe the
church has been spending too much time trying to get people to hedge their
bets. Many have been far too good at presenting the gospel with all of the life
sucked out of it, reducing it to a formula for entering a really cool
afterlife. They have bought Pascal’s Wager.
Perhaps a
more meaningful – and productive – move would be to focus not just on the
“benefits” of following Christ (specifically as that relates to the afterlife),
but on the power and life-changing effects Christ can have here and now. Jesus
came proclaiming the Kingdom of God. Jesus was never concerned about just
getting people into heaven. He was always trying to help them enter the Kingdom
of God. Maybe we should be more like Puddleglum – and Jesus.
Very well explained and understandably written. Also, using Puddleglum in your blog was a delightful event to encounter ^_^ As other conversation have revealed, I much agree with this ^_^
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