Monday, August 6, 2018

A Christian Historian's Worldview


A Christian worldview is defined as the framework of ideas and beliefs through which a Christian individual, group, or culture interprets the world and interacts with it. A Christian worldview in history means that as an historian, we analyze history of the world by looking past the historical events to see the full perspective of God’s work in the world. Christians often view history through the concepts of creation, the fall of man, redemption, and restoration. We believe everything that has happened in the past, good and bad, has a purpose. Christian historians must pay attention to God’s activity throughout history and the ultimate goal that God is leading us toward.

A Christian worldview of history is not just comparing and contrasting secular historical events to biblical historical events. A Christian historian is not in the business of studying God but they are in the business of studying humans. According to Fea, we are not to use the past too freely to promote our own present-day agendas. A Christian historian’s primary responsibility is explanation and understanding, not moral criticism. Christian historians should speak or write ethically about events in the past with caution so that preaching does not overshadow historical interpretation. Also, when a Christian historian engages in moralizing about the past, it should be characterized by mature historical understanding and mature Christian moral thinking. To engage in moralizing the past, a Christian historian should have an adequate theological and biblical understanding of the Christian tradition. Lastly, Christian historians should make moral judgments in an implicit rather than explicit manner and remember to historical figures as morally complex individuals before casting judgment on them.




Sources:
Fea, John. Why Study History?: Reflecting on the Importance of the Past. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2013.

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