{
  "id": "dict_001835",
  "term": "existentialism",
  "slug": "existentialism",
  "letter": "E",
  "entry_type": "philosophy_worldview",
  "entry_family": "worldview_philosophy",
  "depth_profile": "deep_plus",
  "short_definition": "Existentialism is a diverse philosophical movement that stresses personal existence, freedom, choice, anxiety, and the search for meaning. Some Christian thinkers engaged parts of its vocabulary, but the system as a whole must be assessed by Scripture.",
  "simple_one_line": "",
  "tooltip_text": "",
  "aliases": [],
  "scripture_references": [],
  "original_language_terms": [],
  "related_entries": [
    "Worldview",
    "Religion",
    "theism",
    "Christianity",
    "Apologetics"
  ],
  "see_also": [],
  "lede_intro": "existentialism is a worldview or religious term that should be defined carefully before it is imported into biblical interpretation, theology, or apologetic argument.",
  "at_a_glance_definition": "Existentialism is a diverse movement that highlights existence, freedom, anxiety, authenticity, and the personal struggle for meaning.",
  "at_a_glance_key_points": [
    "State the worldview’s core claims about God, reality, humanity, and salvation.",
    "Distinguish descriptive analysis from biblical endorsement.",
    "Ask where Scripture challenges, corrects, or reframes the system.",
    "Use the term to clarify worldview conflict, not to flatten all beliefs into one category."
  ],
  "description_academic_short": "Existentialism is not a single unified school but a family of modern philosophies centered on the individual’s lived experience, responsibility, and struggle to find meaning in a world often described as uncertain or absurd. It commonly emphasizes freedom, authenticity, and inward decision, sometimes while minimizing objective truth, stable moral order, or God’s authority. Christians may recognize that human beings wrestle with guilt, dread, purpose, and death, yet biblical faith grounds meaning and identity in the triune God rather than in self-defining choice.",
  "description_academic_full": "Existentialism is a broad modern philosophical movement associated with themes such as individual existence, freedom, responsibility, anxiety, alienation, authenticity, and the quest for meaning. It appears in both theistic and atheistic forms, so the term should not be treated as a single doctrine. Some existentialist writers explored the human condition in ways that vividly describe fear, guilt, despair, and the urgency of personal decision; in that limited sense, Christians may find parts of its analysis illuminating as observations about fallen human life. Yet existentialism often tends to make subjective experience central, and in many forms it weakens confidence in objective truth, fixed moral order, or humanity’s accountability to the Creator. A conservative Christian worldview affirms that human existence is indeed personal, morally serious, and lived amid suffering and death, but it denies that meaning is self-created or that authenticity is found by autonomous self-definition. Scripture teaches that truth, identity, purpose, and hope are grounded in God and revealed supremely in Jesus Christ.",
  "background_biblical_context": "Biblically, worldview claims are never merely theoretical. They touch worship, idolatry, truth-suppression, repentance, and the fear of the Lord.",
  "background_historical_context": "Historically, existentialism gained force within specific debates, schools, apologetic settings, or cultural pressures. That context helps explain both what problem the term was meant to solve and why Christians often receive it critically.",
  "background_jewish_ancient_context": "",
  "key_texts_primary": [],
  "key_texts_secondary": [],
  "original_language_note": "",
  "theological_significance": "Theologically, the term matters because rival worldviews compete with the biblical account of God, creation, sin, judgment, redemption, and hope.",
  "philosophical_explanation": "Philosophically, existentialism concerns a diverse movement that highlights existence, freedom, anxiety, authenticity, and the personal struggle for meaning. It functions as an intellectual framework or disputed category for describing reality, truth, morality, explanation, or method, so Christian evaluation must test its assumptions rather than grant it neutrality.",
  "interpretive_cautions": "Do not describe the worldview so broadly that its real doctrinal conflicts disappear, and do not borrow its categories uncritically just because some overlap with biblical concerns exists.",
  "major_views_note": "Christian responses to existentialism vary between direct critique, selective use of its analytical distinctions, and engagement with its strongest arguments. The common requirement is that evaluation be governed by Scripture rather than by the framework’s own self-description.",
  "doctrinal_boundaries": "A faithful treatment should preserve the uniqueness of biblical revelation and the exclusivity of salvation in Christ where the issue touches religion and redemption.",
  "practical_significance": "Practically, the term helps readers discern cultural claims, engage rival outlooks, and think apologetically about worship, truth, and discipleship.",
  "meta_description": "Existentialism is a diverse movement that highlights existence, freedom, anxiety, authenticity, and the personal struggle for meaning.",
  "public_url": "/companion-bible-dictionary/existentialism/",
  "json_url": "/companion-bible-dictionary/data/dictionary/existentialism.json",
  "final_disposition": "PUBLISH_CANONICAL"
}