April 9, 2026

3 thoughts on “Come, Follow Me Week 9 – Genesis 24–27

  1. Jeffrey, your article is tremendously helpful and insightful. I have struggled for years, trying to wrap my head around why so many of my wonderful friends and family members have left the church. Your explanation of worldviews is amazing and now it makes so much sense to me! I have forwarded it onto my four sons (ages 27, 24, 20, 17). I loved the Joshua Tree Principle and the CS Lewis quote — I appreciate your work here. Thank you.

  2. Dr. Thayne,
    I found your comments on this topic to be very enlightening and relevant to so much of what we see around us today. I have seen the impact on people close to me when they prioritize convictions related to alternate worldviews above those related to the worldview of Christian discipleship.

    It seems to me that when one closely identifies with one of these alternate worldviews, it risks crippling the ability to repent. This is a serious condition when we consider that the Gospel of Jesus Christ is all about Repentance, and to repent one must feel guilt for having done something wrong. But close affiliation and identification with another worldview will illicit shame on the part of the individual rather than guilt.

    I like the distinction between guilt and shame proposed by Brene’ Brown:

    Shame: an intensely painful feeling or experience of believing that we are flawed and therefore unworthy of love and belonging. “I am bad”

    Contrast that with

    Guilt: holding something we’ve done or failed to do up against our values and feeling psychological discomfort. “I did something bad”

    When an alternative worldview is embraced and becomes part of one’s identify, but is then revealed to be in conflict with the worldview of Christian discipleship, repentance will be seen as an attack on one’s identity rather than a call to constructively modify one’s behavior. The resulting shame will be the source of destructive and hurtful behavior. Repentance will not be possible.

    I also liked what you had to say about the definition of love, which has less and less real meaning. I like that the Greeks had several words for love that covered several of its nuanced meanings. Eros, agape, philia, and storge mean very different things but we tend to lump them all together, which hurts public and private discourse on the subject.

    Strong adoption of alternate worldviews (other than Christian discipleship) also seems to reverse the meaning of Nephi’s call to “liken the scriptures to ourselves”. Instead, I often see attempts to liken ourselves to the scriptures – rather than apply the scriptures to our lives, our alternate worldview becomes the pre-eminent factor and instead we apply our lives (our alternate worldview) to the scriptures – reading our alternate worldview into the scriptures. I suppose this is inevitable in each age and culture, but attempts to do so today appear very transparent when popular culture is teaching us all the new vocabulary of acceptable worldviews on a regular basis.

    Once again, thank you for this very insightful presentation.

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