Why Worldviews Matter
In every generation, Christians face the challenge of communicating the truth of the Gospel in a world awash with competing worldviews. Some are subtle, others are aggressive. In our time, Neo-Marxism—a descendant of classical Marxism, updated with concerns about race, gender, and systemic power—has emerged as a dominant cultural force. It shapes politics, academia, entertainment, and even the moral language of the day.
But can it bear the weight of human existence? Can it answer the deepest questions about truth, morality, identity, and hope?
The late Francis Schaeffer, a prophetic Christian thinker of the 20th century, developed a compelling apologetic method not built on academic formulas but on honest dialogue, existential reality, and biblical truth. He often said he had no “universal method,” yet his consistent approach—rooted in biblical compassion and philosophical clarity—offered seekers both clarity and hope.
What follows is an explanation of Schaeffer’s method and a dramatized dialogue that captures how he might have interacted with a modern Neo-Marxist, showing how Christianity alone offers a worldview that doesn’t collapse under its own weight.
Schaeffer’s Method: “Taking the Roof Off”
Francis Schaeffer’s apologetic centers around a few key steps:
- Listen and Understand the Person’s Worldview
- Every person has a framework through which they interpret life. Schaeffer believed Christians must first listen—not to refute, but to understand.
- Expose the Logical Consequences
- Schaeffer called this “taking the roof off.” He would gently but firmly push the person’s ideas to their logical conclusion, showing where they led—often to despair or absurdity.
- Reveal the Brokenness and Despair
- When a worldview cannot account for the real world—when it breaks under its own assumptions—it leaves people either in confusion or despair. That’s not cruelty; it’s clarity.
- Present the Coherent, Hopeful Truth of Christianity
- Christianity doesn’t collapse when taken to its fullest implications. It explains truth, beauty, goodness, and meaning—rooted in a holy God who redeems through Christ.
A Fictional Dialogue: Francis Schaeffer Meets a Neo-Marxist
Characters:
- Francis Schaeffer (FS) – Christian thinker, philosopher, and evangelist.
- Jordan (J) – A committed Neo-Marxist activist, raised in the university system, confident in critical theory and social justice as redemptive tools.
FS: Thank you for talking with me, Jordan. I always want to understand where people are coming from. Would you help me understand your basic view of how the world works?
J: Sure. I believe society is structured around systems of oppression—patriarchy, racism, capitalism. The powerful create narratives to maintain their dominance. Liberation means dismantling those structures.
FS: So, to clarify, truth is not something objective or discoverable outside of power structures. It’s created by the dominant class?
J: Exactly. What we call “truth” is just a mask for power.
FS: But Jordan, let me ask—if truth is always constructed by power, wouldn’t that include your own belief system?
J: What do you mean?
FS: I mean this sincerely. If truth is never neutral and always an exercise in power, isn’t your own Neo-Marxist critique itself just a power grab by another group?
J: Not exactly. Ours is the voice of the oppressed.
FS: But you’re using institutions—media, universities, even corporations now—to advance your views. Doesn’t that make your movement powerful? And if so, why should we trust your “truth” any more than the previous one?
J: We’re correcting historic injustices.
FS: And I share your concern for justice. But who decides what’s just? If morality is just a shifting consensus of power groups, there’s no grounding for justice—only preference. Doesn’t that trouble you?
J (pauses): We base it on the lived experience of the marginalized.
FS: That’s important to consider—but lived experience can’t, by itself, justify moral conclusions. A person may feel oppressed and still be mistaken. Without a transcendent standard—above culture, above power—how do you know which feelings are just?
J: I’m not sure I believe in transcendent truth.
FS: Then let’s follow that to its end. If nothing is objectively true, and morality is always political, then there’s no basis to condemn anything—not even slavery or genocide—unless you happen to have the power to do so.
J (quietly): That’s not what I want. I want a world where people matter.
FS: I do too, deeply. But if people matter, it can’t be because of group status or power position. It must be because they are something in themselves—made in the image of God.
J: I’ve never thought about it that way.
FS: Christianity gives you what your heart longs for. It tells you that justice is real—because God is just. That truth matters—because God is truth. That people have dignity—not because of class or skin color, but because they are image-bearers of the Creator. It even explains why the world is broken: sin. And it tells you where hope lies: the cross and resurrection of Christ.
J (with emotion): I’ve spent my life tearing systems down. I don’t know what to build.
FS: That’s where the Gospel begins. Not with you building, but with Christ—who already has. His Kingdom isn’t built by tearing others down, but by redeeming broken people like me, like you, and giving us new life.
A Worldview That Holds
Francis Schaeffer never believed in “winning arguments.” He believed in truth and compassion. His goal was to lead people through the ruins of their worldviews so they might see the foundation that does not crack—Jesus Christ, the way, the truth, and the life.
Neo-Marxism offers a compelling critique, but it collapses under its own contradictions. Christianity, by contrast, not only makes sense of the world—it redeems it.
And that’s why Schaeffer’s method is still powerful today. In a world of despairing ideologies, the Christian message remains intellectually credible, emotionally satisfying, and eternally hopeful.
Robert Sparkman
rob@christiannewsjunkie.com
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Francis Schaeffer created a ten-part apologetics series called How Should We Then Live ? (1977). This series is still valuable to the Christian who needs to understand worldview apologetics. It is a classic in my opinion.
Professor Bill Edgar is one of the experts on Francis Schaeffer. He was converted through the efforts of Francis Schaeffer’s ministry.
Concerning the Related Content section, I encourage everyone to evaluate the content carefully.
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