My worldview is the unique lens through
which I view the entirety of life. It is shaped by my experiences, environment,
relationships, and desires. Though my filtering “lens” is completely exclusive
to me, it has been influenced by the worldviews of many others. For example,
from birth until my teenage years, my parents’ worldviews largely shaped my own.
However, more recently, I have begun to broaden my lens and evaluate the
worldviews of people different from myself, choosing to either reject their
beliefs or integrate them into my own. Throughout this process of defining my
worldview, I have been especially captivated by the theories of philosophers
such as Thomas Aquinas, John Locke, Soren Kierkegaard, and of course, Jesus
Christ, the Great Philosopher.
My
belief in God and faith in Jesus is the primary factor that shapes every other
aspect of my worldview, mainly because following Christ wholeheartedly
determines the purpose of existence itself. The motivation behind every action
and thought I have can be traced back to my commitment to living under God’s authority.
The Bible is literally the spoken word of God to His people of exactly how they
should live in accordance to His will. Yet, God knows His people are sinful by
nature and incapable of perfectly abiding by His commandments. For this reason,
He sent His son Jesus to be the mediator and fulfill the punishment of sin we
deserve so we may be reunited in an intimate relationship with our Creator and
no longer burdened by the law.
Thomas Aquinas shared a similar
philosophy about the power and nature of God. Aquinas claimed that God is
simple, perfect, infinite, immutable, and complete in nature. He also claimed
that the existence of God was fairly rational, stated in his five proofs:
motion, causation, existence of the necessary and unnecessary, gradation, and
order tendencies of nature. Personally, I find it difficult to deny the
existence of a God when I observe the complexity and intentionality of
creation. Therefore, I am thankful for Aquinas’s boldness in synthesizing faith
and reason because these two concepts are often unnecessarily separated in
today’s culture.
Politically, I agree strongly with John
Locke’s philosophy, which states all men have certain natural rights and men
should work to earn their property. I am grateful that Locke’s theory on
natural rights was built into the foundation of America; however, these
principles of equality and ownership are still often abused. Natural rights are
a biblical principle in the sense that God created all people equally in His
image. In an ideal society, all genders, ethnicities, and nationalities would
be treated with equal respect and opportunity. Also, Locke’s ideas on the
importance of work for an individual to earn his own property have been slowly
disappearing from American culture due to the faulty welfare system. The American
government’s primary focus is no longer protecting the citizen’s rightfully
earned property, but rather supplying the unemployed with free provisions. In
this vicious cycle, the unemployed see no reason to look for a job while the
government continues to provide for their necessities and the Americans who are
employed are being taxed egregiously to fund this welfare system. Locke’s original
theory of individual hard work leading to property ownership should be
reinstated in America.
Morally, I am in agreement with
Kierkegaard’s three stages of human existence—the aesthetic stage, ethical
stage, and religious stage. A great majority of people spends their lives in
the aesthetic stage, pursuing constant fulfillment of their fleshly desires
without much regard to the wellbeing of others. In the ethical stage, a person
becomes more aware of what is inevitably right and wrong and strives to live
according to their morals. A small handful of people reach the religious stage,
where they know God intimately and dedicate their entire existence to pursuing
and obeying Him. It is a relentless feeling of dissatisfaction called
existential angst that drives people to move from one stage to the other until
they have finally reached the religious stage and found true contentment in
Christ. Daily, I see individuals who live and find purpose according to which
stage they are currently in. Those who are not in the religious stage are
endlessly unhappy and unfulfilled because they have not yet discovered the
perfect peace and provision which comes from knowing Christ alone.
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