What Is Your Worldview?
By Clyde F. Autio, Major General, U.S. Air Force (Ret.)
“Let this mind be in you, which was also in
Christ Jesus.” (Philippians 2:5, KJV)
Within
the past few years, “worldview” has become a mainstream topic for discussion
and application inside the evangelical Christian movement in the United States.
The driving force is the growing concern about the rapidly changing
post-Christian cultural scene (e.g., the removal of Ten Commandment tablets
from courthouses, schools, etc., is but one symptom of this cultural shift away
from the Christian influence that was once prevalent in society).
The
concern about the changing worldview has led to numerous para-church
movements as well as training seminars for the purpose of either reinforcing,
rebuilding or establishing a biblical worldview in the lives of professing
Christians (and the culture). While the term “biblical worldview” connotes
something new to many Christians, it is really just a new name for an old
subject.
I recognize that worldviews are divided into numerous categories, based
upon variations of belief, and each category is divided into many subcategories.
The sub-categorization process continues until ultimately no two people have
an identically same worldview. However, through generalizations it is possible
to ‘lump’ many
individual
worldviews into one group by restricting the amount of detail used in defining
that group.
For
this article it will be sufficient to summarize the definition of worldview as
it follows from The American Heritage
Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition, 2000.
“world·view -noun: 1. The overall perspective from
which one sees and interprets the world. 2. A
collection of beliefs about life and the universe held by an individual or a
group.”
A
person’s worldview, whether it be Christian, humanist or whatever is a personal
insight about meaning and reality. It is how a person interprets, through his
or her own eyes, a personal belief about the world. A person’s worldview tries
to give reasons for how the facts of reality relate and tie together. The
summation of these facts provides the big picture into which the daily events
of a person’s life should fit.
It
is from this worldview that an individual derives an understanding,
interpretation and response to the world in which he or she lives. To each
individual, their own worldview should provide a coherent, but not necessarily
authoritative, manner in thinking about their world. An individual’s worldview
will be shaped by far more than the surrounding physical world. Religion,
philosophy, ethics, morality, science, politics and all other belief systems
that impact on that individual will play a role in shaping a worldview.
An
individual’s worldview is his or her basis for answering such questions as: Who
am I?
Where did I come from? Where am I
going? What is true and what is false? How should I conduct my life, or act? Does
God exist and if so what is my response to Him?
The
Model for the Perfect Worldview
The
most simplistic definition for a biblical worldview is to have the mind of
Christ. That would mean that one would think like Christ; love like Christ; act
like Christ; walk like Christ: have the humility, patience, longsuffering and
all of the other Galatians 5:22–26
fruit of the Spirit. Christ would not only be the model but the individual’s
worldview would be an exact copy. That is the final target of the committed
Christian’s process of sanctification.
Prior
to reaching that glorious point, Christians will have more or less every aspect
of Christ’s worldview reflected in their biblical worldview. Even within the
context of a biblical worldview there will be subdivisions and further
categorizations. (e.g., there will be Baptist worldviews vs. Catholic
worldviews) -- the same dividing occurs within the
realm of humanistic, materialistic and other non-biblical worldviews.
Of
greatest immediate concern is the worldview clash between two major camps: the
biblical worldview and the non-biblical worldview.
The
opening verse of the Bible sets forth
the first and most important facts as the foundation for the development of a
worldview; in this case it is the basis for a biblical worldview. Genesis 1:1 says: “In the beginning God
created the heaven and the earth.” Within this short verse are several profound
statements that must be at the core of every biblical worldview.
First,
it states that since God created the heavens and the earth, He existed prior to
that creation (and the verse only speaks of one God). Second, the universe had
a beginning, and that beginning was the creation of God. Third, that since God
created the heaven and the Earth, He must be either,
or both, superior to and sovereign over His creation. With more study of the
original language, additional truths might be gleaned, but for now it does
place God at the center of the preferred belief system. Today, these are the
very points that are at the center of the worldview conflict.
In
fact, presenting the ‘correct’ worldview has been at the heart of the Bible, from Genesis to Revelation.
The books of Genesis (e.g., its
presentation of the doctrine of marriage), Job,
Proverbs and Ecclesiastes are full of godly wisdom to be used by Bible readers in the construct and
development of a biblical worldview. They are given an accurate understanding
and interpretation of their world, their being, their morality, their value
system and who they are. God saw fit to provide all of this information in His Word to give His people a more
perfect worldview.
Not
only do Paul’s epistles give direction to the various churches about their need
to have a mind-of-Christ worldview, he also prepared Timothy as a co-worker by
inculcating into him those beliefs and practices necessary to be a devoted
follower of Christ. Paul would not have been satisfied if his readers only
followed his teaching to the point of owning the Spirit of Christ without also
proceeding on to cultivating and claiming the mind of Christ. He not only
wanted them to know and acknowledge Christ, but he demanded that they claim Christ’s
point of view, own His values and desires and gloriously suffer for His
kingdom.
Results
From a Mind-of-Christ, Biblical Worldview
Throughout
our post-biblical age in America, those who have held a biblical worldview have
been at the forefront of advancing the Christian religion with its attendant
virtues of scientific and artistic cultural advances, human liberty,
development of medical sciences and the building of educational institutions.
These same people are honored in history for having made remarkable scientific
discoveries, for standing against despotic governments and resisting the abuses
of religious movements that kept common people in slavery and the elite in
power.
The United States, for example, grew
and became a great nation because of a nationally embraced worldview that
accepted God as the center of the universe. The earliest writings of the
founding fathers clearly expressed not only a belief in the power and authority
of God, but also a belief in the goodness of His teachings as found in the Bible (even for those men who might be
called “Deists”).
There
was a time, which probably lasted for the first 125 years after American
independence, that a biblical worldview was prominent. Americans are now in a
period where the secular worldview has become dominant.
One
of the most distinguished students of America’s religious trends is George Barna, founder and president of the Barna
Group. He conducted several polls in 2003 that reveal the current state of the
American evangelical church, and that it lacks a clear understanding of a
biblical worldview: Only 4% of all American adults have a
biblical worldview as the basis of their decision-making; Only 9% of born-again
US Christians have such a perspective on life; Only half of America’s Protestant
pastors—51%—have a biblical worldview.
Does
Worldview Matter?
As
alluded to above, a biblical worldview has been at the
center of many of the world’s greatest contributions to science, human rights,
literature, education, medicine and freedom. For example (and many more could
be cited), Johannes Kepler was a profoundly religious
individual. He studied both Greek and Hebrew so he could read the Scriptures in their original languages.
Among his many noteworthy contributions in astronomy, he discovered three laws
of planetary motion, proved how logarithms work and contributed to the
development of calculus.
In
addition, by all cultural measurements a worldview is important as society
tackles controversial topics like abortion, so-called “gay marriage,” (and so
on) and tries to resolve them.
As
a Christian, your worldview is important to your own Christian sanctification,
to the well-being of your family, to the betterment of your community and
workplace, and essential to the improvement of your nation’s culture and
morality. One can do no less than strive to love the Lord thy God with all of
one’s heart.
Unfortunately,
there has been a falling away from biblical, moral standards within the Church
itself. If the Church is to regain a recognized standing for moral authority in
the arena of public opinion and national dialogue, then it must take a public
stand on such things as:
divorce,
gambling, use of pornography, excessive consumption of alcohol, child and
sexual abuse, and denying the inerrancy and infallibility of Scripture (which,
unfortunately, are occurring at almost the same rate in the Body as they do in
the culture at-large) or societal ills will continue.
The
Church and each member of the Body must become prepared to meet the world
head-on and gain the victory promised by Christ (Matthew 16:18). But first, each believer needs to put on the mind
of Christ and embrace the biblical worldview as presented from Genesis to Revelation.
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Clyde F. Autio, Major
General, U.S. Air Force (Ret.), spoke recently to the Answers In Genesis–USA staff in Petersburg, Kentucky. For more information
regarding Answers In Genesis visit their web site
at www.AnswersInGenesis.org.