Not "A" world-view but several world-views. Each author shows the world-view of his people AT THAT TIME.
NT Wright talks about what a world-view is. Your world-view answers the questions
- Who are we?
- Where are we?
- What's wrong?
- What is the answer?
- What time is it?
With those questions, you can see that, say, Jeremiah's world-view is different from, say, Paul's. Different view of who God's people are, different perception of what the problem is, different view of where God's people are on the eschatological timeline to the solution.
So, when I hear people talk about a "Biblical world-view", I want to ask, "Which one?" Since our situations have both similarities and differences with those of the prophets, the Psalmists, and the apostles, I think it would be appropriate to say that the Bible should
inform our world-views. But we can't have the same world-view as any of the Biblical writers because our situations are not exactly the same.