| 
        			 | 
       		 
        	
        	
        		
        			
        			
        			
        			
                    	
                    		
                   		 
                    	
                    		| Order your copy of Pascal's Pensées from Shop CBN.  | 
                   		 
                    	
                    		|   | 
                   		 
               	     
        			
        			
                    	
                    		
                   		 
                    	
                    		| 
                    		   Let us pray with you -- send in your e-mail prayer request.  
                    		  Or Chat Live with a CBN Prayer Counselor  
                    		  Or you can call  24-hours-a-day, 7-days-a-week at 1-800-759-0700.  
                    		  If you need 
                    		    ongoing support, we encourage you to contact 
                    		    the pastor of your local church. If you don't 
                    		    belong to a local church, please check out our church 
                    		      finder.  
                    		  Prayer Resources on Spiritual Life  
                    		 | 
                   		 
                    	
                    		|   | 
                   		 
               	     
        			
        			
        			 | 
       		 
       	   
		
		
		CHURCH 
HISTORY 
		
		Pascal's Pensées: Thoughts Worth Thinking 
		
		By 
Charles Colson  Breakpoint Ministry  
		
		 
		 CBN.com 
-- This month, we focus on a work by a man  who most people agree, secular and Christian, was a genius: Blaise Pascal.  
		Pascal's  legacy of scientific achievement is almost without equal. By age 30, Pascal had  made vital contributions to mathematics, physics, meteorology, and what would  become computer science.  
		But  as impressive as all of these accomplishments are, Pascal's most important  legacy is his apologetic for the Christian faith, the Pensées.  
		At  age 31, Pascal had a religious experience that made all of his achievements  seem insignificant by comparison. He described his experience: " . . .  about half past ten in the evening until about half past twelve, fire." The God he  encountered was the "God of Abraham, God of Isaac, God of Jacob," and  "not of the philosophers and scholars." 
		The  experience so changed Pascal that he devoted the rest of his life—sadly, only  eight years—to defending the Christian faith. The Pensées, which is French for  "thoughts," are the product of this desire.  
		Unfortunately,  the Pensées live up to their name. They were literally written one thought at a time.  Pascal never finished them, and what he wrote was never systematically  organized.  
		So,  you need a guide to the Pensées,  and you cannot do better than Ken Boa, whose "Great Books Audio CD"  series will help you appreciate the Pensées and other seminal works of Western civilization.  
		As  Boa tells us, the Pensées are "300 years ahead of [their] time." In them, Pascal anticipates  much of the way our postmodern world thinks and feels: our sense of boredom and  the desire for distraction that it creates. As Pascal put it, "if we were  happy, the less diverted we would need to be." 
		But  we are not happy. According to Pascal, the human condition was characterized by  pain, ambiguity, and a lack of clarity, all of which gave rise to anxiety and  angst. But rather than deal with "the tough questions of life," we  distract ourselves with what Pascal calls "vanity," including the desire  for fame and notoriety.  
		Sound  familiar?  
		The  goal of his Pensées was to create an apologetic that described and spoke to the "whole of our  experience": our hearts and wills, as well as our minds. As Pascal  famously put it, "the heart has its reasons, of which reason knows  nothing." 
		According  to Boa, the message of the Pensées is that man is both fallen and is redeemable. As Pascal put it, "the  grandeur of man is great in that he knows himself to be miserable." This  misery can make us aware of our need for God and point us in the direction of  the only One who can deliver us from our misery: Jesus Christ.  
		The Pensées' insight into the human condition is why Pascal is probably more influential  340-plus years after his death than during his short life. His ability to  depict postmodern man is even more remarkable than his anticipation of the  computer.  
		That is why you should learn more about Blaise Pascal. And a good place  to start is by listening to Ken Boa.  
		Order your copy of Pascal's  Pensées from Shop CBN.  
		Subscribe to Dr. Ken Boa’s   Great Books Audio CD Series.  
		More Church 
		  History on Spiritual Life  
		More Bible Study & Theology on Spiritual Life  
		More Spiritual Life 
		 
		 From BreakPoint, Copyright  Prison Fellowship Ministries. "BreakPoint 
		  with Chuck Colson" is a radio ministry of Prison Fellowship 
	      Ministries. Reprinted with permission of Prison Fellowship 
		.
		  
 
 
CBN IS HERE FOR YOU! 
	Are you seeking answers in life? Are you hurting?  
	Are you facing a difficult situation? 
 
 A caring friend will be there to pray with you in your time of need. 
			
		
		 |