No one really believes in materialistic evolution. If they did, why would anyone care about truth, justice, or anything else, for that matter, since nothing has any significance for me or anyone else beyond our brief personal experience of what we call existence? If we are a random production of a chaotic universe that has no guiding moral principle behind it, why all the fuss about racism, child abuse, sex trafficking, etc? Why not simply shrug our shoulders and plod onward toward our next experience and our certain demise? Obviously people believe that such things as justice and truth actually matter. Why?
Why do such a relatively few people ponder life’s greatest questions?
Instead we have become an easily manipulated sound bite generation, which depends on the media to fashion our view of truth and reality. Sadly many, if not most, people do not even know how to think for themselves and are easy pickings for propagandists.
What Is a Worldview?
We all have a worldview of some sort; even if it is a patchwork of mutually contradictory beliefs. The technological world in which we live might be thought of as a satanic strategy to keep people’s minds occupied with trivial things – games, social media, etc., rather than ponder questions that might lead us to God.
A worldview is a framework or perspective through which we view and try to understand the world in which we live.
A person’s worldview will not only affect how he or she understands life and reality; it will also heavily influence decision making. It will determine what is valuable to us.
In this series of articles, I will show how the Bible answers five of life’s most crucial worldview questions.
- Origins: From where did I come?
- Identity: Who am I?
- Purpose: Why am I here?
- Morality: What is right and wrong?
- Destiny: Where am I going after death?
If you think about these questions for very long, it will become obvious that each is related to the others. How we answer the first question will determine how we answer the remainder. If we get the first question right, it will make it easier to get the others right, too. Conversely, if we miss the mark on number one, we will automatically err on the others.
Identifying Our Presuppositions
In order for us to answer these worldview questions, we must agree that everyone has assumed certain things, which cannot be proved true or false.
Presuppositions are what we each consider to be self-evident truths, which simply must be believed, since they cannot be scientifically proved.
Our Declaration of Independence held that certain truths were self-evident: that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, and that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.
The writers agreed upon the following presuppositions:
- People are created by God.
- All people are equal.
- All people have God-given rights, specifically, life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
It is impossible to “prove” that these presuppositions are true; however, it was considered to be obvious by the founders of our nation. Where did they get these “truths?” The first one comes from Genesis in the Bible. The second one is found in the New Testament. The third one most likely came from contemporary philosophers. The use of the term “right” is not a biblical term, however, and reflects the mood of the times, especially in the eyes of Englishmen who believed that their rights as citizens were being violated by the Crown. Regardless of their origin, by the time the Declaration was penned, these ideas were considered to be self-evident and beyond question. Sadly, some things were not so self-evident, such as slavery being a contradiction of points two and three. All of us, even our worldviews, have blind spots.
Perhaps some of my readers may not agree with our nation’s founders’ “self-evident truths,” but, whether we like to admit it or not, we all have made such presuppositions. It is unavoidable. Even people who claim to be rational materialistic scientists have presumed in the validity of the scientific method, which presumes that there are scientific truths to be discovered, which presumes there is order and logic to the universe, which necessitates some unprovable reason for this to be so.
Using the Bible to Build Our Worldview
God created the world and people so that many things must be accepted by “faith.”
In other words, we all have to believe something, even if that belief is the self-contradictory notion that there is no such thing as unconditional truth. People jump to unscientific conclusions all the time because of our built in need to believe. That is why people fall for the false narratives of the media over and over again. That is why we so easily believe negative gossip. We are believers by design.
God made us to depend on him to be our interpreter of reality and source of truth.
When Adam and Eve fell for Satan’s lie and rejected that way of “doing life,” humanity descended into the confusing darkness of trying to fathom the meaning of life by ourselves. We lost our way. That is why Jesus came, as he put it, to “seek and save the lost.” (Luke 19:10)
In an effort to reorient ourselves, it is a good idea to ask ourselves, “Where did I get my ideas about life and reality?”
If we are followers of Christ, who accept the Bible as a source book of God’s revealed truth, we start there to build our worldview. If we do not accept what the Bible teaches, we must find some other way to construct a view of life and our world that is both satisfying and consistent.
My hope is that you will stay with me as we consider each crucial life question from a biblical point of view. Even if you hold different presuppositions from mine, I believe considering what the Bible has to say will be beneficial and thought provoking. The very first verse of Genesis answers our first worldview question. That is where the second article will begin.