Worldview
I’m waiting by the mailbox for my copy of What’s Your Worldview?: An Interactive Approach to Life’s Big Questions by James N. Anderson. Here’s a related series of posts in which Anderson explains what worldviews are and why they’re important (Crossway Blog):
Worldviews are like belly buttons. Everyone has one, but we don’t talk about them very often.
If we’re going to engage effectively both with individual unbelievers and with non-Christian belief-systems, it makes good sense to do so in terms of their underlying worldviews.
When we’re trained to think in terms of worldviews, we’re better equipped to challenge unbelievers at the root of their beliefs and actions rather than at the surface level … .
In teaching on this subject I’ve found it helpful to use a simple acronym—TAKES—to break down a worldview into five basic areas or subdivisions.
There will also be a fifth post, the final one. I’ll update this with a link when it happens.
Bible and Science
I also recently listened to one of James Anderson’s lectures, Can I Trust the Bible Over Evolutionary Science?, from the Reformation Conference at Shiloh Presbyterian Church—and recommend it, too. (All the lectures from the Reformation Conference are here.)