Pope Francis has written an Apostolic Letter on Blaise Pascal, the French mathematician, physicist and philosopher born 400 years ago today.
The Pope highlights his scientific brilliance, concern for the poor, and relentless search for God.
According to Vatican News, a key theme of Pope Francis’ letter is the “brilliant and inquisitive mind” of Pascal. A child prodigy, he made important breakthroughs in mathematics and, at age 19, invented an arithmetic calculator, a forerunner of the modern computer.
The Pope stresses that Pascal used his intellectual gifts to wrestle with “the questions that troubled his age”, inventing, for example, the “five-penny coaches” system, the world’s first public transport network.
Pascal at 31 years old, experienced a conversion which he referred to as the “Night of Fire” – for his nuanced understanding of the role of reason in religious belief.
On the one hand, the Pope says, Pascal argued for the "reasonableness of faith in God”; on the other, precisely because of his own intellectual prowess, he also recognised reason’s limits, and stressed the importance of responding with faith to God’s call.
A final theme to emerge from the letter is Pascal’s attention to those less well-off than himself.
The Pope quotes Pascal’s words on his deathbed: “If the physicians tell the truth, and God grants that I recover from this sickness, I am resolved to have no other work or occupation for the rest of my life except to serve the poor.”
“It is moving,” Pope Francis writes, “to realize that in the last days of his life, so great a genius as Blaise Pascal saw nothing more pressing than the need to devote his energies to works of mercy.”
Cardinal Tolentino: Pope “profound admirer” of Pascal’s
At a press conference convened to present the Apostolic Letter, Cardinal Tolentino de Mendonça – the Prefect of the Vatican’s Dicastery for Culture and Education – stressed that Pope Francis is a “profound admirer” of Pascal.
Pascal, the Portuguese Cardinal said, is one such beacon, because he “brings everything together”: science and faith, philosophy and mathematics, spirituality and a practical mindset.
He also stressed that Pope Francis’ letter, as well as discussing the well-known aspects of the French writer’s life, makes an original contribution in that it delves into lesser-known territory, such as his concern for the poor.
In response to a question about Pascal’s association with Jansenism, a controversial theological movement in the early modern Church, the Cardinal said that the French writer was “perfectly Catholic.”
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