What Is the Christian (Biblical) Worldview?
In a world filled with competing worldviews—each offering its own explanation for existence, morality, and purpose—the Christian worldview stands alone in its beauty, coherence, and truth. The Bible doesn’t merely offer bits of moral wisdom or spiritual comfort. It presents a comprehensive and divinely revealed framework for understanding all of reality. This framework is often summarized in four foundational movements: Creation, Fall, Redemption, and Restoration. These four categories make up what I, and many others, call The Big Picture.
The Big Picture of Scripture is not merely a helpful outline or a narrative device—it is the supreme metanarrative that defines all of human existence. It answers the great existential questions: Who are we? What is our purpose? What’s gone wrong with the world? Is there any hope? How will everything end? Other worldviews, including those advanced by secularism, Neo-Marxism, Eastern mysticism, or even moralistic religious traditions, fail to give satisfying, consistent answers to these questions. Only biblical Christianity offers the kind of comprehensive coherence and divine authority that meets the deepest needs of the human heart and mind.
Let us walk through the Big Picture.
Definitions
- Worldview: A set of basic beliefs through which one interprets all of life.
- Metanarrative: A grand, overarching story that explains the history and purpose of the world.
- Redemption: God’s work to buy back and restore fallen humanity through Jesus Christ.
- Consummation: The final completion of God’s plan, including judgment and the New Creation.
Creation: God Made Everything Good
Scripture: “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth” (Genesis 1:1, ESV).
The biblical narrative begins not with man, but with God—eternal, holy, and all-powerful. He created all things ex nihilo (out of nothing). Genesis 1 and 2 describe the ordering of creation, the filling of the world with light, life, and beauty, and the crowning act of creation: mankind.
God made humanity in His own image: “So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them” (Genesis 1:27, ESV). Mankind was designed to represent God in the world—to reflect His character, exercise stewardship over creation, and live in joyful fellowship with Him and with one another.
Marriage, work, dominion over nature, and the family unit were all instituted before sin entered the world. The man and the woman were naked and unashamed (Genesis 2:25), indicating total harmony with each other, with themselves, and with God.
In this state, Adam and Eve enjoyed perfect communion with their Creator in the Garden of Eden—a paradise of order, delight, and purpose. This was life as it was meant to be.
Fall: Man Rebelled Against God
Scripture: “Therefore, just as sin came into the world through one man, and death through sin, and so death spread to all men because all sinned” (Romans 5:12, ESV).
Genesis 3 records the tragic moment that changed the course of history. Tempted by the serpent, Eve and Adam transgressed God’s one command not to eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil (Genesis 2:17). With that act, they declared autonomy from God, preferring their own judgment over His holy word.
The consequences were catastrophic. Their eyes were opened, but not in the way they hoped. They felt shame, guilt, and fear. Fellowship with God was broken. They were expelled from the garden and subjected to death, disease, toil, pain, and eventually physical decay.
Spiritually, man died that day. He was alienated from God, estranged from his neighbor, and even at odds with his own body. The image of God in man was not erased but was severely marred. Human nature was corrupted.
From that point on, all human beings are born “in Adam”—under the dominion of sin and death. “For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God” (Romans 3:23, ESV). We are not blank slates or morally neutral. We are rebels by nature and by choice.
Redemption: God Sent a Rescuer
Scripture: “But God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8, ESV).
God did not abandon His creation to decay and damnation. From the moment of the Fall, He promised a Deliverer: “I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and her offspring; he shall bruise your head, and you shall bruise his heel” (Genesis 3:15, ESV). This protoevangelium—the first announcement of the gospel—foretold the coming of Jesus Christ.
Throughout the Old Testament, God unfolded His redemptive plan through covenants, prophecies, and types. The sacrificial system, the Law, the tabernacle, and the kingship all pointed forward to a Messiah who would come to reconcile God and man.
In the fullness of time, that Messiah came. Jesus Christ—the eternal Son of God—took on human flesh. He lived a sinless life and died a substitutionary death on the cross to satisfy divine justice and pay the penalty for our sin. “For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God” (2 Corinthians 5:21, ESV).
Redemption is not universal in application but is offered freely to all who repent and believe. Through faith in Christ, we are transferred from the kingdom of darkness to the kingdom of God’s beloved Son (Colossians 1:13). We move from being in Adam to being in Christ. This is not mere moral improvement—it is spiritual resurrection.
Restoration: God Will Make All Things New
Scripture: “Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth… He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more…” (Revelation 21:1,4, ESV).
The final act of the Big Picture is the consummation of all things. Christ will return, not as a suffering servant but as conquering King. He will judge the living and the dead, vanquish evil, and usher in the New Heavens and the New Earth.
This will be a glorified, renewed Eden—where the effects of the curse are fully reversed. The saints will live in glorified bodies, never to sin, sorrow, or die again. God will dwell with His people, and righteousness will cover the earth as the waters cover the sea.
Revelation 21-22 describes this eternal state. No more night. No more curse. The Tree of Life returns. We will see His face and reign with Him forever.
Why This Worldview Matters
Secular worldviews offer no satisfying account of reality. Materialism reduces man to a chemical accident. Postmodernism robs life of meaning. Eastern mysticism dissolves the self into illusion. Neo-Marxism turns everything into power struggles and oppression narratives.
But the Christian worldview explains the human condition—our dignity, our depravity, our longing for meaning, and our need for grace. It answers the deepest longings of the human heart with truth, not wishful thinking. It is not a philosophy we invented. It is a reality God revealed.
As I have written before, emaciated liberal versions of Christianity—those that compromise truth for cultural relevance—are not sufficient. They offer no firm answers, no real gospel. They are secularism wearing a clerical collar.
Biblical Christianity is objective truth. It is not one worldview among many, but the measuring rod against which all others must be tested.
Practical Implications
- For Identity: You are not an accident. You are made in God’s image.
- For Purpose: You exist to glorify God and enjoy Him forever.
- For Hope: No matter how broken this world is, Christ is coming again to restore it.
- For Evangelism: This is the story the world needs to hear. It is good news for the lost.
S.D.G.,
Robert Sparkman
rob@basedchristianity.org
RELATED CONTENT
Pastor Alistair Begg discusses the biblical worldview in this sermon. Alistair Begg is a fine teacher of God’s Word.
Pastor Voddie Baucham discusses the biblical worldview at a conference in 2022. Voddie Baucham is an excellent speaker.
The pdf document below is a more detailed explanation the concepts discussed in the post with a lot more Scriptures. I used this document in jail ministry.
This blog post is related to a letter to the editor that I wrote in September 2022. The letter to the editor is available below in pdf form.
Concerning the Related Content section, I encourage everyone to evaluate the content carefully.
Some sources of information may reflect a libertarian and/or atheistic perspective. I may not agree with all of their opinions, but they offer some worthwhile comments on the topic under discussion.
Additionally, language used in the videos may be coarse. Coarse language does not reflect my personal standards.
Finally, those on the left often criticize my sources of information, which are primarily conservative and/or Christian. Truth is truth, regardless of how we feel about it. Leftists are largely led by their emotion rather than facts. It is no small wonder that they would criticize the sources that I provide. And, ultimately, my wordview is governed by Scripture. Many of my critics are not biblical Christians.
Feel free to offer your comments below. Respectful comments without expletives and personal attacks will be posted and I will respond to them.
Comments are closed after sixty days due to spamming issues from internet bots. You can always send me an email at rob@basedchristianity.org if you want to comment on something, though.
I will continue to add items to the Related Content section as opportunities present themselves.