I wasn't familiar with Pascal's Wager until now. Wikipedia has a good bit to say about
it (it's interesting that, though the argument is obviously flawed, it was groundbreaking territory in probability theory). However, it appears Pascal's Gambit may be being used out of context:
…Pascal was clear [that] the application of his wager rests on the premise that an "honest attempted reason" about God's existence is impossible. Nor did Pascal ask readers to trust in "blind or feigned faith"... the wager was intended only to provide the seed that grows into a full believing life.
I'm a Christian, and I agree with the speaker in the video. I especially liked his (Biblical!) point about belief not being an exercise of the will.
Holden (I'm a Christian, too), are you drawing a dichotomy between faith and belief (I don't think i'd ever thought about it, but i think i could make an argument for that)? Or what biblical reference are you pointing to about belief not being an exercise of the will? Or do you mean our faith/belief is authored by God (
Heb. 12:2, among others)? Sorry for the off-topicness... this may should have been asked through a PM, but i thought some others may be interested in the answers.
For those who have been interrupted in their homes by well-intentioned Christians (or whatever), i appreciate what you're saying. I've never been comfortable with the idea of door to door stuff (I don't know why i didn't see it before, but that's worse than telemarketing!), and now i can better expound on my reasons for it. Thanks for that, truly! But in defense of
some of these Christians (i would admit it's
probably the minority), they are
genuinely concerned with where you spend eternity (one of these people would be my dad; please don't throw goat's blood on him if he should show up on your doorstep), and it is their way of showing that they care and expressing their love for their fellow man. So, do with that what you will, but not all of them are out there specifically to annoy you or to simply try to win some points with the "Big Guy" (both of which are wrong motives).