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Wednesday Bible Study

Worldview Rumble: Jesus vs. Marx Pt. 2

01-21-2026 • Wes Wilkinson

Christians are called to stand for truth and justice with clarity and compassion.

Marxist Economics

  • Marxism treats economics as the foundational category that determines laws, government, social structure, and everyday life.

  • Marxism views reality through class categories rather than individual identity, with an “oppressor versus oppressed” framework.

  • Marxism argues that capitalism inherently creates exploitation, especially through the underpayment of workers and the accumulation of wealth by a ruling class.

  • Marxism claims capitalism is unstable and will eventually collapse through crisis and conflict.

  • Marxism teaches that capitalism does not simply fade away, but must be overthrown through revolution.

  • Socialism is presented as a transitional stage where the working class seizes the means of production through the state.

  • Communism is presented as the final goal where class distinctions disappear, government becomes unnecessary, and a form of utopia is achieved.

  • Marxism promises freedom and salvation through socialism, while historical attempts produced widespread suffering and death.

Marxist Ethics

  • Marxism teaches that ethics are not fixed, but evolve with history and social development.

  • Marxism rejects moral absolutes and critiques “old morality,” especially moral commands grounded in biblical ethics.

  • Marxism frames traditional morality as a tool used by oppressors to preserve power and maintain inequality.

  • Marxist ethics are defined by the belief that whatever advances the revolution and the communist end goal is morally good, and whatever hinders it is morally evil.

  • This ethical framework treats hatred toward the perceived oppressor class as morally justified.

  • The lesson describes Marxist ethics as utilitarian in practice, where the ends justify the means.

  • Revolution is presented as morally necessary within Marxism, including the justification of violence if it moves history toward the goal.

Biblical Contrast

  • The biblical worldview treats individuals as made in God’s image and therefore possessing inherent value.

  • The biblical worldview teaches that human beings are morally broken and that no human system can produce true utopia.

  • Biblical ethics are rooted in God’s nature and character, not in shifting social goals.

  • Biblical ethics are summarized by loving God fully and loving one’s neighbor as oneself.

  • The lesson calls believers to live out Christian ethics within real-world economic life, resisting injustice while remaining faithful to Christ.

Application

  • Christians are called to stand for truth and justice with clarity and compassion, responding to opposition without adopting a revolutionary ethic, and demonstrating the hope, steadiness, and love of Jesus in a culture shaped by competing worldviews.

Primary Scripture References

  • Ecclesiastes 3:11

  • Psalm 33

  • John 14:27

  • John 16:33

  • Matthew 22:37–39

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