⏱ 6 minute read
My parents first introduced me to the teachings of Werner Erhard when I was a teenager. They signed me up to attend his training in New York City, then called the Forum, while I was in high school. What I learned there has stayed with me over the years and continues to shape my thinking. As I reflected on those lessons, I began to consider how they align with my Christian faith, which led me to share these thoughts. Responsibility has been misunderstood for centuries. Too often it is reduced to fault or blame, a heavy burden imposed by others. Werner Erhard, founder of est, offered a radically different account. For him, responsibility is not guilt, shame, or even praise. It is a chosen context. To take responsibility is to declare oneself as cause in the matter of one’s life, including the interpretation of its events. This move shifts the locus of control. Rather than being at the effect of external forces, one recovers agency to act. What follows is transformation: complaints become commitments, and circumstances become possibilities.
The core of Erhard’s framing aligns, in surprising depth, with Christian teaching. Christianity has always taught that the believer is not trapped by the past. The Apostle Paul’s letters insist that through Christ one becomes a new creation, no longer enslaved to sin but empowered to live freely. This is not merely about absolution of fault, it is about transformation of context. To live in Christ is to live in a world where responsibility is not imposed as condemnation but embraced as vocation.
Consider Erhard’s idea that responsibility is a context one adopts, not a burden one carries. This resonates with Christ’s words: “My yoke is easy and my burden is light.” The Christian is called not to wallow in guilt but to step into a life where agency flows from grace. Erhard’s language of shifting from complaint to commitment parallels Christ’s invitation to replace empty ritual with living obedience. Both turn passivity into active authorship.
Skeptics may wonder whether Erhard’s framework, rooted in personal development, can be reconciled with Christianity’s emphasis on divine sovereignty. If God is the ultimate cause, how can humans claim authorship of their lives? Yet Christianity has always taught a paradoxical balance. God grants freedom precisely so that human beings may choose to take responsibility. Responsibility, in this sense, is not competition with God but alignment with His gift. Augustine wrote that grace perfects nature, it does not destroy it. Likewise, Erhard suggests that when individuals locate responsibility within themselves, they find greater power to fulfill their commitments. Christians would see this as the power to fulfill God’s will.
One might also object that Erhard’s account lacks the moral anchoring of sin and forgiveness. Christianity speaks of responsibility not only as context but also as accountability before a holy God. Yet here, too, the resonance remains. Erhard does not deny that people err. He denies that error defines them. The Christian gospel makes the same claim in theological form: sin does not have the last word, Christ does. By owning responsibility, one ceases to be defined by sin and begins to live in the light of redemption. Complaints about the brokenness of the world transform into commitments to bear witness and to act faithfully.
The practical implications of this alignment are profound. Erhard insists that responsibility creates workability and power. When individuals own outcomes, they gain the ability to invent new possibilities and to keep promises with integrity. Christianity calls this fruitfulness. A life lived in Christ is one marked by good works, not as a means of salvation but as its expression. The Book of James puts it plainly: “Show me your faith without deeds, and I will show you my faith by my deeds.” Responsibility, in Erhard’s sense, is the ground on which such deeds take root.
It is also worth noting that Erhard’s account undermines victimhood, a concept that dominates much of modern discourse. To be responsible in Erhard’s framing is not to deny that injustice exists but to refuse to be defined by it. Christians, too, are called to respond to suffering not with despair but with hope. Paul, imprisoned and persecuted, could write of rejoicing always. His agency was not curtailed by circumstance because he had chosen responsibility for his response. In this way, both Erhard and the Christian tradition place ultimate authorship back into the hands of the individual, under God.
What distinguishes Christianity is the horizon of hope. Erhard offers responsibility as a secular context that empowers the present. Christianity situates responsibility within an eternal framework. The believer is responsible not only for commitments in this life but for stewardship of a soul destined for eternity. Yet far from making responsibility a crushing burden, Christianity proclaims it as liberation. Grace transforms responsibility from an external imposition into an internal choice, precisely as Erhard describes.
The harmony between Erhard and Christianity should not be overstated. There remain differences. Christianity anchors responsibility in a personal God who redeems, while Erhard frames it in terms of existential agency. But the structural parallel is undeniable. Both accounts agree that freedom begins not when blame is assigned, but when responsibility is claimed. Both see transformation as the fruit of responsibility. And both insist that to live responsibly is to live powerfully.
In our cultural moment, where victimhood narratives abound and personal agency is eroded by appeals to systems and structures, the convergence of Erhard and Christianity is a reminder of an older truth. Freedom is not found in shifting blame, but in taking ownership. Complaints dissipate, commitments grow, and life becomes fertile ground for possibility. Christians call this discipleship. Erhard calls it responsibility. Both point to the same horizon: a life lived fully, freely, and in alignment with a higher order.
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My parents first introduced me to the teachings of Werner Erhard when I was a teenager. They signed me up to attend his training in New York City, then called the Forum, while I was in high school. What I learned there has stayed with me over the years and continues to shape my thinking. As I reflected on those lessons, I began to consider how they align with my Christian faith, which led me to share these thoughts. Responsibility has been misunderstood for centuries. Too often it is reduced to fault or blame, a heavy burden imposed by others. Werner Erhard, founder of est, offered a radically different account. For him, responsibility is not guilt, shame, or even praise. It is a chosen context. To take responsibility is to declare oneself as cause in the matter of one’s life, including the interpretation of its events. This move shifts the locus of control. Rather than being at the effect of external forces, one recovers agency to act. What follows is transformation: complaints become commitments, and circumstances become possibilities.
The core of Erhard’s framing aligns, in surprising depth, with Christian teaching. Christianity has always taught that the believer is not trapped by the past. The Apostle Paul’s letters insist that through Christ one becomes a new creation, no longer enslaved to sin but empowered to live freely. This is not merely about absolution of fault, it is about transformation of context. To live in Christ is to live in a world where responsibility is not imposed as condemnation but embraced as vocation.
Consider Erhard’s idea that responsibility is a context one adopts, not a burden one carries. This resonates with Christ’s words: “My yoke is easy and my burden is light.” The Christian is called not to wallow in guilt but to step into a life where agency flows from grace. Erhard’s language of shifting from complaint to commitment parallels Christ’s invitation to replace empty ritual with living obedience. Both turn passivity into active authorship.
Skeptics may wonder whether Erhard’s framework, rooted in personal development, can be reconciled with Christianity’s emphasis on divine sovereignty. If God is the ultimate cause, how can humans claim authorship of their lives? Yet Christianity has always taught a paradoxical balance. God grants freedom precisely so that human beings may choose to take responsibility. Responsibility, in this sense, is not competition with God but alignment with His gift. Augustine wrote that grace perfects nature, it does not destroy it. Likewise, Erhard suggests that when individuals locate responsibility within themselves, they find greater power to fulfill their commitments. Christians would see this as the power to fulfill God’s will.
One might also object that Erhard’s account lacks the moral anchoring of sin and forgiveness. Christianity speaks of responsibility not only as context but also as accountability before a holy God. Yet here, too, the resonance remains. Erhard does not deny that people err. He denies that error defines them. The Christian gospel makes the same claim in theological form: sin does not have the last word, Christ does. By owning responsibility, one ceases to be defined by sin and begins to live in the light of redemption. Complaints about the brokenness of the world transform into commitments to bear witness and to act faithfully.
The practical implications of this alignment are profound. Erhard insists that responsibility creates workability and power. When individuals own outcomes, they gain the ability to invent new possibilities and to keep promises with integrity. Christianity calls this fruitfulness. A life lived in Christ is one marked by good works, not as a means of salvation but as its expression. The Book of James puts it plainly: “Show me your faith without deeds, and I will show you my faith by my deeds.” Responsibility, in Erhard’s sense, is the ground on which such deeds take root.
It is also worth noting that Erhard’s account undermines victimhood, a concept that dominates much of modern discourse. To be responsible in Erhard’s framing is not to deny that injustice exists but to refuse to be defined by it. Christians, too, are called to respond to suffering not with despair but with hope. Paul, imprisoned and persecuted, could write of rejoicing always. His agency was not curtailed by circumstance because he had chosen responsibility for his response. In this way, both Erhard and the Christian tradition place ultimate authorship back into the hands of the individual, under God.
What distinguishes Christianity is the horizon of hope. Erhard offers responsibility as a secular context that empowers the present. Christianity situates responsibility within an eternal framework. The believer is responsible not only for commitments in this life but for stewardship of a soul destined for eternity. Yet far from making responsibility a crushing burden, Christianity proclaims it as liberation. Grace transforms responsibility from an external imposition into an internal choice, precisely as Erhard describes.
The harmony between Erhard and Christianity should not be overstated. There remain differences. Christianity anchors responsibility in a personal God who redeems, while Erhard frames it in terms of existential agency. But the structural parallel is undeniable. Both accounts agree that freedom begins not when blame is assigned, but when responsibility is claimed. Both see transformation as the fruit of responsibility. And both insist that to live responsibly is to live powerfully.
In our cultural moment, where victimhood narratives abound and personal agency is eroded by appeals to systems and structures, the convergence of Erhard and Christianity is a reminder of an older truth. Freedom is not found in shifting blame, but in taking ownership. Complaints dissipate, commitments grow, and life becomes fertile ground for possibility. Christians call this discipleship. Erhard calls it responsibility. Both point to the same horizon: a life lived fully, freely, and in alignment with a higher order.
If you enjoy my work, please consider subscribing: https://x.com/amuse.
Sponsored by the John Milton Freedom Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to helping independent journalists overcome formidable challenges in today’s media landscape and bring crucial stories to you.
READ NEXT: [SHOCK] Dem Frontrunner’s Outrageous Community Service Exposed
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