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Worldview Essay

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Worldview Essay Today’s society consists of many worldviews. Most people tend to pull beliefs from different religions, but often stick to one main worldview. A worldview to me is the gathering of beliefs that shape what we do on a daily basis and forms our overall view on life. When I look at my beliefs critically, I am able to see my worldview and see how it compares to different worldviews, but also how it compares mainly to the Christian Worldview. My view of God is very similar to the non-denomination Christian Worldview. I believe that God is an omnipotent Trinity of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit that oversees the entire universe. I believe that God created everything in his image, including man. Because He rules over …show more content…

If not, they are condemned to hell. The nature of the universe is something that very few worldviews can agree on. Many peoples’ worldviews are mainly concerned with materialistic things because there is no supernatural being; it is merely an arrangement of particles. However, I believe that the universe is an illusion (Cosgrove, 2006, p. 30). To me, it is an illusion that is able to leave us to a life and afterlife filled with God. What makes the difference is what a person truly believes in at the end. Whether someone believes in a materialistic universe or the illusion of the universe that leads to a God-filled life decides how he or she lives his or her life. Personally, I believe all that matters in the end is God and my faith in Him. The question of how I know what I know is a question that is one of the most difficult I have encountered. Much of what I know is based on logic and thinking. This is where I may veer off of the Christian Worldview slightly. I believe that God has given humans the ability to reason and think logically, and I use that as much as possible. I think that He intended for us to use our minds to find what we believe to be true, hoping that people would seek God when seeing that He is the only real truth. Cosgrove (2006) makes a great comment on secular humanism and a person’s ability to find value, and in

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