Elements of a Christian Worldview 
          
          
          Item: 020491 
     
          
          
          
          
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            compiled and edited by Michael D. Palmer
The intriguing exploration of how our faith applies to 
every area of our lives. Each chapter is written by a 
different author who discusses how faith interacts with an 
academic discipline, everyday life issue, or cultural 
issue. It encourages you to think about and cement your
own worldview according to God’s truths. 
Paper. 514 
pages.
Special feature: Several informative, mini-essays familiarize students with theologians, 
philosophers, sociologists, and other key figures, such as: Hobbes, Locke, Arthur Holmes, Marx, 
Sartre, Camus, Homer; Sophocles, C.S. Lewis, Chagall, Plato, Justin Martyr, Athanasus of 
Alexandria, Augustine, Benedict of Nursia, Aquinas; Catherine of Sienna, Luther, Calvin, John 
Edwards, John Wesley, Karl Barth, Carl F. H. Henry, Aristotle, William of Ockham, Bacon, Galileo, 
Isaac Newton, Einstein, Johann Herbart, Wilhelm Wundt, Descartes, Freud, Skinner, Maslow, Auguste 
Comte, Emile Durkheim, Dorothy Sayers, Mead, Max Weber, Gregory of Nyssa, Frances Schaeffer, 
Chesterton, Milton, and Shakespeare.
Sample questions: Each chapter concludes with questions for students. Here are a few questions 
extracted from various chapters:
1. In the section entitled “Human Work and God’s Curse,” Volf describes the curse associated with 
the Fall. How does he relate the curse to human work? 
2. What are the predominant images accompanying the coming of the Holy Spirit on the Day of 
Pentecost (Acts 2:1-4)? Explain how C.S. Lewis used these images in the creation of Narnia in The 
Magician’s Nephew. 
3. Describe the basic differences among experimental, clinical, and humanistic psychology.
 
4. Why is experience important to a worldview? What is the relationship of experience to ideology?
 
5. What is the “transformational model” that the author describes? How does it exemplify the 
doctrines of Creation and the Fall? Describe how it might work when applied to a process such as 
television or film production. 
(PDF Format, Acrobat 
            Reader required.) 
            
Publisher: Logion Press