Congressional Issues 2012 SOCIETY What
is a "Worldview?"
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Every day you are bombarded with billions of facts. Which
facts are important? How do you interpret them?
A Worldview is the pair of glasses through
which you view the world. It is the grid which filters,
prioritizes, and sorts billions of facts and makes sense out of
life. It helps you decide whether you view a fact with joy or
with sadness. It may tell you to ignore some facts altogether.
It is the foundation upon which you build the structure of your
life.
Do
we live in an orderly universe with predictable regularities, or
do we live in a random, evolving, undependable and chaotic
universe? The answer depends on which worldview you choose.
"Is science possible?" is a question science cannot
answer. It is an assumption of your worldview.
A Worldview is a presupposition. People don't choose
their worldview because they are forced to by a neutral
observation of brute facts. People choose a worldview to justify
their morality. They choose a worldview to justify ignoring some
facts and emphasizing other facts.
Aldous
Huxley, grandson of Thomas H. Huxley (who was called
"Darwin's Bulldog"), explained how he chose his
worldview:
“I had motives for
not wanting the world to have a meaning; consequently
I assumed that it had none, and was able without any
difficulty to find satisfying reasons for this
assumption. Most
ignorance is vincible ignorance. We
don’t know because we don’t want to know. It
is our will that decides how and upon what subjects we
shall use our intelligence.
Those who detect no meaning in the world generally do
so because, for one reason or another, it suits their
[purpose] that the world should be meaningless.
The philosopher who finds no meaning in the world is
not concerned exclusively with a problem in pure
metaphysics, he is also concerned to prove that there
is no valid reason why he personally should not do as
he wants to do, or why his friends should not seize
political power and govern in the way that they find
most advantageous to themselves....
For myself, as, no doubt, for most of my
contemporaries, the philosophy [worldview] of
meaninglessness was essentially an instrument of
liberation. The liberation we desired was
simultaneously liberation from a certain political and
economic system and liberation from a certain
system of morality. We objected to the morality
because it interfered with our sexual freedom; we
objected to the political and economic system because
it was unjust. The
supporters of these systems claimed that in some way
they embodied the meaning (a Christian
meaning, they insisted) of the world. There was one
admirably simple method of confuting these people and
at the same time justifying ourselves in our
political and erotic revolt: we could deny that
the world had any meaning whatsoever.” (Aldous
Huxley, Ends
and Means, Chatto & Windus: London, 1946,
pp. 270, 273)
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A worldview also characterizes a society, or nation. Millions
of people can be controlled and directed by the
"worldview" of their government or leader. Those with
an active "worldview" tend to dominate those with a
passive "worldview":
- Active: "It is my destiny to rule over
others."
- Passive: "I'll never amount to much. I just
take what comes my way."
- Active: "God created me to enrich the lives of
those in my family and my fellowman."
- Passive: "The universe is an accident. Mankind
just evolved. I just do what I'm told. Maybe I'll win the
lottery."
A worldview perpetuates itself.
- A Christian worldview creates a Christian civilization,
which allows people to contemplate and refine their
understanding of the universe.
- A pagan worldview creates paganism, not civilization, in
which human beings are dominated by superstition and the
forces of nature, and between hunting and gathering don't
have time for philosophy (from the Greek words meaning
"love of wisdom").
A worldview is your ultimate philosophical commitment. It is
your religion. You apply your worldview to everything you think
and do.
“I was already a Christian, but my worldview
had not yet caught up to my Christian commitment. It can take
a long time to apply the lessons of the Bible to your
life, your work, and your community. Those days were
the time when I began to do that. Joseph
Farah, editor, WorldNetDaily
What Joseph Farah is saying is that he grew up with the
worldview of the religion of Secular
Humanism, which says there is no God, that man is his own
god. Farah had been applying this philosophy/religion to his own
life. Then Farah realized he was not God, but Christ is Lord of
Farah's life. That meant Farah had to start learning how to obey
Jesus rather than Joseph Farah and other Humanists. Life,
work, community. Every area of life is affected by one's
ultimate worldview.
It also means that Christ had to become Lord of Farah's
personal life, his work, his community: every facet of human
life and society.
- Kevin Craig agrees with a former Prime Minister of the
Netherlands, Abraham
Kuyper, who proclaimed:
- "In
the total expanse of human life there is not a single square
inch of which the Christ, who alone is sovereign, does not
declare, that is Mine! "
- We must use our God-given powers of reason and logic to
apply Christ's model of love and justice to every area of
life:
- Relationships - family, friends, neighbors, associates
- Culture/Institutions - language, church, state, music,
ethics
- Community/Government - nation, state, community,
neighborhood
- Creation/Environment - the creation and the use we make
of it
- Economics/Vocation - jobs, income, economic activities
- Science/Technology - tools, technologies, ways of
knowing and using the creation
- Religion/Spirituality - Christianity, Islam, atheism,
church, spiritual life
- Education/Development - formal schooling, life
experience
Your worldview provides answers to these basic questions:
- Why is there something rather than nothing? "
- Why is there sin and suffering?
- What’s wrong with the world?
- Is there hope - can we eliminate sin and suffering?
- What can be done to fix it?
- What part does God want me to play in this transformation?
Gary North applies
these questions to your business, your nation, your world, your
universe:
- Who's in charge here?
- To whom do I report?
- What are the rules?
- What do I get for obeying or disobeying?
- Does this outfit have a future?
The original American Worldview is seen in
the Declaration of Independence:
| When in the Course
of human events, it becomes necessary for one
people to dissolve the political bands which have
connected them with another, and to assume among the
Powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to
which the Laws of
Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent
respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they
should declare the causes which impel them to the
separation. |
God
is here and He is not silent. He has given us His
revelation in the Bible, also referred to as "The
Laws of Nature and of Nature's God" |
| We
hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men
are created
equal, that they are endowed
by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights,
that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of
Happiness. |
Because we are created in
the Image of God, we have a conscience (literally,
"with" + "know," something man knows
with God) that cannot escape knowing certain
"self-evident truths," among them that God is
there and He is not silent, and we must not infringe on
the life, liberty, and property of others (see duties
below). |
| He has waged cruel war
against human nature itself, violating its most sacred
rights of life and liberty in the persons of a distant
people who never offended him, captivatng and carrying
them into slavery in another hemisphere, or to incur
miserable death in their transportation thither. This
piratical warfare, the opprobrium of INFIDEL powers, is
the warfare of the CHRISTIAN king of Great Britain.
Determined to keep open a market where MEN should be
bought and sold, he has prostituted his negative for
suppressing every legislative attempt to prohibit or to
restrain this execrable commerce. |
This paragraph is an
excerpt from Jefferson's
draft of the Declaration, removed by the Continental
Congress to secure approval of slave-holding states for
the plan for Independence. Many Christians wanted to
abolish slavery, but the so-called Christian King of
Britain, George III, would not permit this. A true
Christian worldview takes action against social and global
injustice. There is no area of human thought or action
where a worldview does not prescribe duties or reform
thinking. |
| We, therefore, the
Representatives of the united States of America, in
General Congress, Assembled, appealing
to the Supreme Judge of the world
for the rectitude of our intentions, do, in the
Name, and by Authority of the good People of these
Colonies, solemnly publish and declare, That these United
Colonies are, and of Right ought to be Free and
Independent States; that they are Absolved from all
Allegiance to the British Crown, and that all political
connection between them and the State of Great Britain, is
and ought to be totally dissolved; and that as Free and
Independent States, they have full Power to levy War,
conclude Peace, contract Alliances, establish Commerce,
and to do all other Acts and Things which Independent
States may of right do. And for the support of this
Declaration, with
a firm reliance on the
Protection of Divine Providence, we
mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and
our sacred Honor. |
Not a single person who
signed the Constitution was a "deist"
(one who believed in an impersonal creator-god who never
involves himself/herself/itself in the creation). The God
of America's Founding Fathers answered their prayers and
miraculously and supernaturally intervened in America,
changing the course of history. "Providence"
is the act of the "Supreme Judge"
intervening in history against wicked judges and on behalf
of their victims; for the good and against the evil. |
The Declaration of Independence provides
another standard we can use to evaluate our worldview: compare
it with "The Laws of Nature
and of Nature's God." The Ten Commandments summarize a
Biblical worldview. In reverse order, here are the questions the
Ten Commandments begin to ask about your worldview:
- 10. Thou
shalt not covet thy neighbour's house, thou shalt
not covet thy neighbour's wife, nor his manservant, nor
his maidservant, nor his ox, nor his ass, nor any thing
that is thy neighbour's.
-
Am I filled with
resentment from envying the rich and coveting what I
don't have? Most Political Campaigns
appeal to envy, resentment,
and covetousness. "Vote for me and I'll take
money from the rich and give it to you!" An
economy based on covetousness eventually
self-destructs. |
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9. Thou
shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour.
-
Do I lie to cover up my
character defects? What would politics
be without lying? |
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8. Thou
shalt not steal.
-
Do I cheat others to
gratify myself? The essence of
politics today is stealing from others to get
something for nothing. "Thou shalt not steal--except
by majority vote" is how
politicians have re-written this commandment. |
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7. Thou
shalt not commit adultery.
-
Have I kept my marriage
vows? Do I lust and have impure thoughts and
actions? It's astonishing how many of
today's most famous politicians left
their first wife for a younger, prettier
lobbyist. The Family is God's central
institution, not "the State." |
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6. Thou
shalt not kill.
-
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5. Honour
thy father and thy mother: that
thy days may be long upon the land which the LORD
thy God giveth thee.
-
| Am I angry at my parents,
and is our relationship broken? Do I project my
anger against them onto other authorities? |
-
4. Remember
the sabbath day, to keep it holy. {9}
Six days shalt thou labour, and do all thy work: {10}
But the seventh day is the sabbath of the LORD
thy God: in it thou shalt not do any work, thou, nor thy
son, nor thy daughter, thy manservant, nor thy
maidservant, nor thy cattle, nor thy stranger that is
within thy gates: {11} For in six days the LORD
made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is,
and rested the seventh day: wherefore the LORD
blessed the sabbath day, and hallowed it.
-
| Do I work
to serve God and
others, or do I expect something for nothing? Am I
able to rest, and trust God? |
-
3. Thou
shalt not take the name of the LORD
thy God in vain; for the LORD
will not hold him guiltless that taketh his name in vain.
-
Do I take the Lord's Name
in vain? Politicians say "I
will support the Constitution, so help me God."
They never do. |
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2. Thou
shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or
any likeness of any thing that is in heaven above, or that
is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the
earth: {5} Thou shalt not bow down thyself to
them, nor serve them: for I the LORD
thy God am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the
fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth
generation of them that hate me; {6} And showing mercy
unto thousands of them that love me, and keep my
commandments.
-
Do I cover up my
character defects with "religion" and
false
spirituality? America's
Founders warned against "false
religions" |
-
1. Thou
shalt have no other gods before me.
-
Is my relationship with
God broken because I am trying to be my own god
(Genesis 3:5)? Do I seek to be god over others? One
of America's greatest problems is viewing the
government as savior.
America's Founders believed that choosing "security"
over liberty was the mark of idolatry. |
A campaign to reduce the size and intrusiveness of government
will be futile unless it deals with the worldview
question. Gary North writes :
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What is the main problem we face?
Conspiracies? No. The real problem is [worldview:]
the set of moral, intellectual, and economic ideas
that the West's voters have accepted as valid that have
led to their partial enslavement. The conspirators
use these false religious principles to control
Western societies. These false principles include the
following:
1. Mankind
is essentially unified.
2. There are no conflicting moral
issues that divide people permanently.
3. Man must "take control"
of man.
4. Mankind will eventually evolve into
a "higher species" — a "leap of
being."
5. Elite planners can use the laws of
evolution to speed up this evolutionary process.
6. Men can be saved
through State legislation.
7. Men can be saved through education.
8. Ideology is irrelevant; only
"interests" count.
9. "Deprived" individuals
are not personally responsible for their acts.
10. The State is the primary
welfare agency rather than the family.
11. The State should redistribute
wealth to benefit "the People."
12. The State must protect inefficient
producers from free market competition.
13. The State must supervise education.
14. We need to construct a
one-State world in order to achieve peace,
freedom, and prosperity.
When a majority of voters accept a
majority of these premises, the triumph of one or
another conspiratorial group is assured. It is by means
of these man-worshipping,
State-worshipping ideas that conspirators enlarge the
power of civil government, and it is by the power of
civil government that they rule. To attempt to remove
the ruling conspiracies without first removing most
people's confidence in these false ideas is about as
useful an effort as a condemned man's switching from
hanging to the firing squad. Jesus described the results
of such a self-defeating "housecleaning":
When the unclean spirit is gone out of
a man, he walketh through dry places, seeking rest,
and finding none. Then he saith, I will return into my
house from whence I came out; and when he is come, he
findeth it empty, swept, and garnished. Then goeth he,
and taketh with himself seven other spirits more
wicked than himself, and they enter in and dwell there
.... (Matthew 12:43-45a).
The owner of the house is worse off
than he was when he started. This is the legacy of all
political revolutions that are not grounded in biblical
principles of social order. Men "throw
the rascals out," only to find that a worse
gang of rascals has replaced the first one. |
This campaign is not just about winning one of 435 seats in
Congress. It's about restoring America's Christian worldview. We
have tried to apply that worldview to every issue in the 2010
campaign.
Twelve
Worldview Questions
- 1
- Veritology: What is Truth?
- The Truth Project
begins by defining truth as
"that which corresponds to
reality." This absolute and
eternal truth, at the heart of
Jesus' mission on earth, continues
to be the focal point of the Cosmic
Battle in our own time.
- 2
- Philosophy and Ethics: Says Who?
- Truth is not simply
an academic concept. The way we
think about truth has a direct
bearing upon the way we live our
lives. What's more, our
understanding of right and wrong is
directly dependent on our worldview:
is the universe God's creation or a
closed cosmic cube?
- 3
- Anthropology: Who is Man?
- The Bible tells us
that man was created in God's image
but fell from innocence through sin.
Modern psychology, on the other
hand, asserts that man is inherently
good and behaves badly only under
the influence of social or
institutional pressure. This lesson
explores the implications of both
views.
- 4
- Theology: Who is God?
- Eternal life,
according to Jesus, is knowing God
in an intimate, personal, and
relational way. Such knowledge,
which is possible only because of
divine revelation, transforms us
from the inside out as we begin to
see ourselves in the light of His
majesty and holiness.
- 5
- Science: What is True?
- Science, the
"systematic study of the
natural world," brings to light
innumerable evidences of Intelligent
Design. But Darwinian theory
transforms science from the honest
investigation of nature into a
vehicle for propagating a godless
philosophy.
- A
careful examination of molecular
biology and the fossil record
demonstrates that evolution is not
a "proven fact."
Meanwhile, history shows that
ideas, including Darwinism as a
social philosophy, have definite
consequences – consequences that
can turn ugly when God is left out
of the picture.
- 6
- History: Whose Story?
- Does the past
have an objective actuality and
significance? Or does it, as
postmodernist philosophy asserts,
exist primarily inside our heads?
This question considers the
meaning of history as God’s
story and shows us why remembering
is so important.
- 7
- Sociology: The Divine Imprint
- The order we
observe in the natural realm is
even more apparent in the social
systems God has established:
family, church, community, state,
labor, and the union between God
and man. Life is a series of
relationships that flow out of and
reflect the Trinitarian nature of
the Creator.
- 8 - Unio
Mystica: Am I Alone?
- Is it possible
for the infinite, eternal Creator
to dwell within the heart of an
individual? The implications of
this great mystery, which
represents the very core of the
Christian faith, are explored at
length in this examination of the
most intimate of the social
spheres.
- 9
- The State: Whose Law?
- Of all the social
spheres, the state, to which God
grants the power of the sword for
the punishment of evil and the
preservation of the good, has the
greatest potential to go awry if
it oversteps its authority. The
civil magistrate must always
remember his place under the
sovereignty of God – otherwise,
havoc will ensue.
v
- 10
- The American "Experiment in
Liberty": "Self-Evident
Truths"
- America is unique
in the history of the world. On
these shores a people holding to a
biblical worldview have had an
opportunity to set up a system of
government designed to keep the
state within its divinely ordained
boundaries. Question #10 follows
the history of this experiment and
explores what happens to freedom
when God is forgotten.
- 11
- Labor: Created to Create
- Contrary to a
great deal of contemporary popular
opinion, work is not a
"curse." God Himself is
active and creative, and He calls
man to share in the joy of His
activity and creativity. Labor,
economics, media, and the creative
arts all have a role to play in
magnifying the glory of the
Creator.
- The ethical law
and the meaning of the Christian
life are summed up in the
commandment to love God and one's
neighbor. This command is the
source of the believer's
motivation for self-sacrificial
service to the needy and their
personal involvement in our
culture.
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- What's
a Worldview Anyway?
- What
is a Worldview?
- What
is a Biblical Worldview?
- What is a
world view?
- Worldviews
-- Introduction
- Barna Group
- Today's
"culture wars" are, in fact, "worldview
wars."
- Worldview:
History and Christian Application of Weltanschauung
Theory
- Christian
Worldview -- A Biblical Worldview
- Worldview
Defined and Diversity
- Probe
Ministries - Worldviews
- Probe
Ministries - Why Worldview?
- Worldview
and Culture
- The
Christian worldview can be summed up in a single phrase:
"Jesus is Lord" -- which is the first creed of
Christianity. Understanding Christ's lordship over all of
life is no easy task. Yet, once we begin to understand
that all of life--not just "church"
life--is of intense interest to God, we are able to bring
a renewed sense of purpose to our lives and faith.
- The
Lordship of Christ does not allow us to ignore art,
politics, or literature, any more than it allows us to
ignore the lost, hungry, sick, or the poor. Only by seeing
the world through God's eyes, or what we call
"thinking Christianly," will we understand our
mandate to redeem the fullness of our culture and reach
out to a dying world.
- Bottom
line: our interests can be no smaller than God's.
- Worldview
Web Guide - Prison Fellowship
- World view
- Wikipedia
- Probe
Ministries - Worldview and Truth
- Probe
Ministries - Worldviews, Part 2
- Probe
Ministries - Christian Worldview Links
- The
Necessity of a Reformed World and Life View
Resources from Prison Fellowship:
"Worldview" and "Theocracy"
Those who advocate a Christian "worldview" also
advocate "Christian Theocracy."
Nevertheless, virtually all of off-site resources listed
above are able defenses of the idea of Christianity as a
world-and-life-view, but they often run away from the word
"Theocracy" (which is defended
on this website), even as they wisely note that
"theocracy" is often raised by atheists as a boogeyman
to scare people away from allowing God's Law to have full sway
in society.
Atheists don't want to live in a society where all other
people and institutions openly acknowledge God and practice His
Commandments. When religion dictates behavior in our
neighborhoods, on the job, in schools, in businesses, in the
arts and sciences, and in government (if there still is one),
atheists see this as an intolerable "theocracy." It's
just as bad as an Islamic theocracy, where religion governs
everything. Atheists don't want "freedom of
religion," they want "freedom
from religion." That means freedom from a
Christian worldview put into practice by the rest of
society. To attack such a society, they accuse the worldview
Christian of trying to "impose a theocracy."
A truly Christian Theocracy (a society under God's Law) is
radically different from a Muslim theocracy. A truly Christian
Theocracy cannot be imposed without violating Christ's
command not to be like the Gentile kings ("archists").
A truly Christian Theocracy is a libertarian worldview that
impacts every area of life.
next: W.W.J.D.?
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