The Starting Point of our Worldview
Do you know what you believe? Every worldview and belief must start somewhere, to explain the essential questions of life. We have certain questions we must ask ourselves to begin the basis of our worldview. There are seven vital questions in Christianity, but this essay will focus on the first three. The starting points of our worldview are about who God is, what the universe is like, and who man is.
The first question we may ask is: What is the nature of God? It can be difficult for us to see that God is both infinite and personal. He is all knowing and powerful, yet still able to communicate with His creation. God has always been, and will always be. He transcends the earthly plane of existence and exists beyond time. The laws of nature do not apply to Him, for He is the creator of all. He possesses all power and can act out His will as He sees fit. All of this might seem overwhelming to someone who does not know God, but He does not use His omnipotence for evil. He is good, loving, and just. He did not create evil, only the choice for His creation. His goodness shows through His creation, and His personal being is shown through man. He created man in His image, so through man we see a sliver of
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As aforementioned, man was created in God’s image, therefore some of God’s attributes are present in man. God’s personal nature is present in man, shown through the personable nature of man. Each individual has their own personality, but can also communicate with one another. Man also has the capacity for love, which can obviously be observed in God. Essentially, man shares most of God’s personal traits, just not to the same extent of God. However, man has another side to him, unlike God. Man is sinful and has the choice of evil. Despite man’s best efforts, he will always sin and will definitely always need God. Where man will always fail and become weakened, God will help
In the Christian religion, like many others, the belief in a single, ultimate, powerful being is upheld and practiced. However, unlike other monotheistic religions, the Christian belief in God is expressed in three parts: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. This aspect of Christianity is unique and is part of what defines it. Although some people may think so, God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are not three separate beings. They are united as one in the Trinity, the same all-powerful God.
“Across the Spectrum” is full of vehement discussion on a variety of Christian doctrines. It questions diverse positions that may be held and is a useful tool for confronting strenuous theological problems. Gregory A. Boyd and Paul R. Eddy wrote this book to introduce “students to the range of positions evangelicals take on various disputed topics.” Gregory Boyd received a PhD from “Princeton Theological Seminary” and is formerly a “professor of Theology at Bethel University.” Currently he is the senior pastor of “Woodland Hills Church” in Minnesota.
This essay will be addressing the seven worldview questions of Christians versus Wiccan’s. Additionally, the common components of Wicca and Christianity practices including concerns when receiving healthcare, will be examined. Finally the writers own spiritual perspectives as well as what the writer learned during the research conducted for this paper will be discussed. There are a variety of religions, some such as Christianity, Catholicism, Judaism, the more commonly recognized. While others, Buddhism, Wiccan, or Shintoism are not as widely known.
From everlasting to everlasting, he is God (Psalm 90:2). There was never a time when he was not. Lucifer rebelled against Him and introduced evil and rebellion to the beautiful creation He made. And as the Omega, He will bring to complete finality the world of evil, and usher in a new beginning for a perfect world of righteousness. This is what the book of Revelation is all about.
The creation was made kind and compassionate; he helped a family out with chores and saved a girl from drowning. “ The feelings of kindness and gentleness, which I had entertained but a few moments before, gave to a hellish rage and gnashing of teeth. Inflamed by pain, I vowed eternal hatred and vengeance to all mankind” (101). Sure he was called
This coincides with my next argument in that God has created a world that allows for both good and evil, and along with this, he gave humans the ability to make their own choices. God allows humans, who are not all-powerful and not necessarily wholly good beings to have the decision to make between being good and being evil. I am a firm believer in this hands-off approach that God may have taken during his creation because free will allows people to ultimately choose their own path in life, and while allowing the possibility for evil to occur God himself remains both wholly good and all-powerful. Without free will it would be unclear as to what makes humans unique individuals; free will allows for the understanding that humans can be themselves and choose their outcomes ultimately resulting in them deciding their lives. Unfortunately, free will along with good and evil go hand in hand.
World view is part of the philosophy of life or our concept of the world. A world view is the way people look at the world around them and how they interpret it. A world view is how we see the world, of how we view it. Some people may not notice it but we all have a world view. We all have our own thought about the world.
The argument for God’s existence is that God is a perfect being, he is infinite, independent, supremely intelligent, and supremely powerful. Descartes goes on to talk about how God exists because he can conceive of him as better than himself (AD 40). God is perfect and perfect at everything, and was the first thing that sent everything into motion (AD 45). God is the ultimate cause.
Incorporation of elements of the modern or postmodern worldview is not compatible with the Christian worldview. Modern and postmodern worldviews are based on human ideas and rejection of God. The loss of the single story holding a community together has led to allowing everyone to create their own story (Sire, p. 216). This process was notated within the time frame of the Greco- Romans when Plato started to explain the order of the world without recourse to myth or divine authority (Goheen & Bartholomew, p. 72). Cultural acceptance of the belief there can be multiple perspectives allows for the
Firstly, man is born evil because society shows him to be evil. An example of this is how parents must raise their child to be good. A parent never has to raise their child to do bad things. A young child might draw on the wall and believe that it is art, however the parent will stop the child and tell them that drawing on the wall is a bad thing to do.
So, we end up getting the point that one can conceive or imagine a being which is greater than God. But the conclusion of this whole process leads to a contradiction because the basic assumption is that God is a being which nothing greater can be conceived. So we cannot imagine something which is greater than
The scripture tells us that God is God from all eternity. Before anything, He was there Richard of Saint Victor reminds us, “Everything which is or can be either has being from eternity or begins to be in time, and again, everything which is or can be either has being from itself or it has being from something other than itself... it has been established that what holds the highest place in this universe of things cannot receive what it itself is from its inferior. Therefore some substance must exist which both holds the highest place and is from
Everyone has their own idea of what God will be like when they finally meet him, but there is a certain persona about him with which everyone agrees. First, he is a loving God. Second, he is an all knowing God. These are character traits that are always attributed to God, but they are also the most troubling things about him. If God is omniscient then why has he given us free will?
Theological scholars have crafted different methods of classifying God’s attributes. The two most commonly used classification are the incommunicable and communicable attributes of God. The communicable attributes of God are those God shares or “communicates” with us like love (God is love, and we can love as well), knowledge (God has knowledge, and we are able to have knowledge as well), mercy (God is merciful, and we are able to be merciful too), or justice (God is just and we, too, are able to be just). The incommunicable are those attributes that God does not share or “communicate” to others like God’s eternity (God has existed for all eternity, but we have not), unchangeableness (God does not change, but we do), or omnipresence (God is
Many people might not think they know what a worldview is, but they actually do know what it is without realizing it because everyone has one. The text book definition of worldview is a person’s comprehensive beliefs system about the natural of all things. Basically, worldview is what a person believes in, and a person’s beliefs are made up of answers to six questions. However, this paper is not about worldview in general; it is about one of the worldview’s example from this culture. First before given an example from our culture that relates to the worldview that will be talked about, the writer is going to give some information about the worldview.