By Dr. Albert Mohler
AlbertMohler.com
The biblical master narrative serves as a framework for the cognitive
principles that allow the formation of an authentically Christian
worldview. Many Christians rush to develop what they will call a
“Christian worldview” by arranging isolated Christian truths, doctrines,
and convictions in order to create formulas for Christian thinking. No
doubt, this is a better approach than is found among so many believers
who have very little concern for Christian thinking at all; but it is
not enough.
A robust and rich model of Christian thinking—the quality of thinking
that culminates in a God-centered worldview—requires that we see all truth
as interconnected. Ultimately, the systematic wholeness of truth can be
traced to the fact that God is himself the author of all truth.
Christianity is not a set of doctrines in the sense that a mechanic
operates with a set of tools. Instead, Christianity is a comprehensive
worldview and way of life that grows out of Christian reflection on the
Bible and the unfolding plan of God revealed in the unity of the
Scriptures.
A God-centered worldview brings every issue, question, and cultural
concern into submission to all that the Bible reveals, and it frames all
understanding within the ultimate purpose of bringing greater glory to
God. This task of bringing every thought captive to Christ requires more
than episodic Christian thinking and is to be understood as the task of
the church, and not merely the concern of individual believers. The
recovery of the Christian mind and the development of a comprehensive
Christian worldview will require the deepest theological reflection, the
most consecrated application of scholarship, the most sensitive
commitment to compassion, and the courage to face all questions without
fear.
Christianity brings the world a distinctive understanding of time, history, and the meaning of life.
The Christian worldview contributes an understanding of the universe
and all it contains that points us far beyond mere materialism and frees
us from the intellectual imprisonment of naturalism. Christians
understand that the world—including the material world—is dignified by
the very fact that God has created it. At the same time, we understand
that we are to be stewards of this creation and are not to worship what
God has made. We understand that every single human being is made in the
image of God and that God is the Lord of life at every stage of human
development. We honor the sanctity of human life because we worship the
Creator. From the Bible, we draw the essential insight that God takes
delight in the ethnic and racial diversity of his human creatures, and
so must we.
The Christian worldview contributes a distinctive understanding of beauty, truth, and goodness,
understanding these to be transcendentals that, in the final analysis,
are one and the same. Thus, the Christian worldview disallows the
fragmentation that would sever the beautiful from the true or the good.
Christians consider the stewardship of cultural gifts—ranging from music
and visual art to drama and architecture—as a matter of spiritual
responsibility.
The Christian worldview supplies authoritative resources for understanding our need for law and our proper respect for order. Informed
by the Bible, Christians understand that God has invested government
with an urgent and important responsibility. At the same time,
Christians come to understand that idolatry and self-aggrandizement are
temptations that come to every regime. Drawing from the Bible’s rich
teachings concerning money, greed, the dignity of labor, and the
importance of work, Christians have much to contribute to a proper
understanding of economics. Those who operate from an intentionally
biblical worldview cannot reduce human beings to mere economic units,
but must understand that our economic lives reflect the fact that we are
made in God’s image and are thus invested with responsibility to be
stewards of all the Creator has given us.
Christian faithfulness requires a deep commitment to serious moral reflection on matters of war and peace, justice and equity, and the proper operation of a system of laws.
Our intentional effort to develop a Christian worldview requires us to
return to first principles again and again in a constant and vigilant
effort to ensure that the patterns of our thoughts are consistent with
the Bible and its master narrative.
In the context of cultural conflict, the development of an authentic
Christian worldview should enable the church of the Lord Jesus Christ to
maintain a responsible and courageous footing in any culture at any
period of time. The stewardship of this responsibility is not merely an
intellectual challenge; it determines, to a considerable degree, whether
or not Christians live and act before the world in a way that brings
glory to God and credibility to the gospel of Jesus Christ. Failure at
this task represents an abdication of Christian responsibility that
dishonors Christ, weakens the church, and compromises Christian witness.
A failure of Christian thinking is a failure of discipleship, for we
are called to love God with our minds. We cannot follow Christ
faithfully without first thinking as Christians. Furthermore, believers
are not to be isolated thinkers who bear this responsibility alone. We
are called to be faithful together as we learn intellectual discipleship
within the believing community, the church.
By God’s grace, we are allowed to love God with our minds in order
that we may serve him with our lives. Christian faithfulness requires
the conscious development of a worldview that begins and ends with God
at its center. We are only able to think as Christians because we belong
to Christ; and the Christian worldview is, in the end, nothing more
than seeking to think as Christ would have us to think, in order to be
who Christ would call us to be.