Playing the Fool: The Subversive Literary Apologetics of John Bunyan and Blaise Pascal
Parry, D
Date: 10 July 2019
Journal
Etudes Epistémè
Publisher
Association Études Épistémè
Publisher DOI
Abstract
John Bunyan and Blaise Pascal seem unlikely bedfellows – a fiercely Protestant English artisan
with only vernacular literacy and a devoutly Catholic French polymath. Yet there are striking
affinities between the two in their theologies, spiritual experience, and apologetic
methodologies. Both believe that conversion requires divine ...
John Bunyan and Blaise Pascal seem unlikely bedfellows – a fiercely Protestant English artisan
with only vernacular literacy and a devoutly Catholic French polymath. Yet there are striking
affinities between the two in their theologies, spiritual experience, and apologetic
methodologies. Both believe that conversion requires divine intervention, yet both quote St
Paul’s words Fides ex auditu / “Faith cometh by hearing” (Romans 10:17), thus involving
human persuasion in conversion. Though both sometimes employ rational propositional
arguments, both see rational argument as insufficient to change a person’s affections and will.
Both Bunyan and Pascal adopt literary strategies of persuasion to faith that seek to bypass and
subvert their readers’ cognitive defences.
Pascal’s famous “wager” (pari) is often criticised for seeking to compel an impossible
belief in something of which one is not persuaded. However, this criticism misconstrues the
literary context. In this section of the Pensées, Pascal is speaking “selon les lumières naturelles”
(“according to natural lights”), adopting St Paul’s rhetorical strategy of “speak[ing] as a fool”
(2 Corinthians 11:23) by inhabiting and subverting the thought categories of his pragmatically
self-interested worldly readers. His initial goal here is not to compel belief but to persuade
readers to participate in a sacramental environment in which they can more readily be
habituated into faith. Bunyan’s literary apologetic likewise draws on the model of St Paul and
Bunyan’s imaginative fiction is a form of playing the fool which, like Pascal’s apologetic
literary strategy, appropriates and reinscribes the thought categories of readers towards a vital
faith.
English
Collections of Former Colleges
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