Hilston said:
Anyone who "grasps" such a concept is not thinking very carefully. The reason that God can be trusted to use evil for good (Gen 50:20) is because He knows the exact course of the future exhaustively.
This is an imposed presupposition.
It's not. It is
my view that I'm explaining. Not yours. I impose it on no one.
This is not a logical conclusion from this passage. There is no need fro God to have EDF to use evil for good, and to be trusted to do so.
It is an irrational assertion, especially given the oft repeated claim of Open Theists that God's prophesies are known to fail.
So, here is exhibit 1 of how you impose your presuppositions.
Again, I have not imposed a presupposition. I have explained the logic (guaranteed outcomes require exhaustive foreknowledge), and I have shown the illogic of the Open View (the claim that exhaustive foreknowledge is not required, and the claim that God has uttered prophecies that have failed).
Hilston said:
This is precisely why finite man cannot be trusted to use evil for good: because finite man does not know the future exhaustively. Anyone who has watched time travel movies understands the importance of knowing every single detail before one mucks around with the past.
LOL... Time travel movies? Are you serious?
Of course. It illustrates the point. We could have discussed Novikov, Fermi, Hawking, Forward, Einstein and Stahlhofen, but why bring up Transversal Time Dilation when a simple reference to Charles Dickens will suffice?
Hilston said:
Even the best of intentions can have drastically undesirable results. It's common sense rationality to understand that one must account for every single detail of the future, from the beats of a cholesterol-ridden heart, to the beats of a butterfly's wing, in order to guarantee a particular outcome.
Again, presupposition. Entry #2.
You're going to have to explain what you mean by "imposing presuppositions," because so far you're 0 for 2. The only presuppositions I've "imposed" so far (more like "assumed") is that you understand the English language and that you have a feel for basic logic. I'm starting to have doubts on both counts.
The problem isn't that the individual doesn't have EDF, but that the individual doesn't know what possible courses of the future will result from changing particular actions.
If one only knows the possible courses of the future, and how one's actions will impact those possible futures, your concern is assuaged.
Except for the fact that God gets it wrong sometimes, according to the Open View; that God is "surprised," and that things happen that never even entered God's mind. Knowing all possible courses of the future didn't guarantee much at all in those cases.
This is also a misunderstanding that you have about OVT. You assume that because God doesn't have EDF that He doesn't know anything about the future, including possible futures.
Now who is imposing? You tell me I don't understand OVT (and so far you haven't demonstrated it), then turn right around and completely botch the view of your opponent. I could borrow a phrase and say "pot, kettle, black," but there's only one black vessel here, and it's not me.
The result is that you "dumb down" OVT so you can insult it.
Mere assertion. You can keep saying this until you're blue (or black) in the face, and it isn't going to make it true. Show how I've dumbed down OVT, muz. Don't just assert. As far as I and others can tell, I'm exposing the inconsistencies and illogic of OVT, taking OV tenets to their logical conclusions, and no one has yet to correct me.
Hilston said:
While the Open Theist claims to trust that God can take care of the future, it's not a rational position to hold if God doesn't know the future exhaustively. Especially considering the Open-View belief that God could change His mind about the future and decide to pull the plug, chuck the whole mess into the dumpster, and start all over again.
Sounds as though you are telling God what He can and can't do.... Isn't that the pot calling the kettle black? Who are you to impose on God like this? Or is your own puny little existence greater than God's will?
Where are you getting this, muz? I'm not telling God what He can or can't do. I'm showing the irrationality of the OVT conception of God, and where that conception leads. It is the Open View that posits that God could change His mind and not fulfill His promises. The Settled View posits that God is immutable, and will never go against His decreed purpose, working all things according to the counsel of His will (Eph 1:11). Do you not believe that God is free to stop loving if He wanted to? Isn't it an Open View belief that God is free to become evil if He wanted to? If not, then I apologize. Please set me straight if I'm wrong about this.
Hilston said:
Or, according to the Open View, God could decide to stop loving, to stop being good, to stop being just, and to stop relating.
This is incorrect. This is your failure to understand OVT. OVTs still say that God, by nature, is loving and just and relational.
Perhaps you're off the Open View reservation on this one, muz. Bob Enyart believes that Jesus could have chosen not to be executed. Do you agree with Mr. Enyart?
Hilston said:
On the Open View's assumptions, there are no guarantees. The idea that "a God could prophesy, knowing how His actions would bring about the prophecy, but not knowing the exact course of the future to get there" is completely non sequitur.
This is you imposing presuppositions again.
I'm convinced that you're either trying to say something else and using the wrong words, or you don't know what you're talking about. Let me break down my previous statements: "On the Open View's assumptions, there are no guarantees," means, given the claims of Open Theists, that God doesn't know the future and sometimes gets it wrong, the logical conclusion is: There are no guarantees. I have not imposed any presupposition upon you except the understanding of language and the application of logic. If you still disagree with the statement, then you either do not understand English, or your logical faculties have been compromised, or both.
You assume that, unless God has fixed the game beforehand, that He cannot prophesy. This is where you start to sounds like deist.
"Fixed the game beforehand" is a pejorative from the Open View lexicon. The biblical and Settled View is that God has decreed all things in advance, not for the purpose of "rigging the game," but because God is God. And as such, God is very God-like, in that He cannot make a plan that will not come to pass. It is the essential nature of being God, and God cannot NOT be God, and God cannot NOT know all things without exception, including the future. Note that I am not imposing this view upon you; I am merely explaining the logic and the language of the biblical/Settled View.
If God knows all possible courses of the future, without knowing exactly which one will actualize, and knows how His actions will limit those possible courses, then God would know how to bring about the things He prophesies without needing to know exactly how He is going to get there.
See what I mean? No guarantees. I say this not because Open Theists will admit to it, but because it is the logical conclusion of a doctrine that says God doesn't know exactly "how He is going to get there" and that God sometimes gets it wrong.
And you've clearly stated the reason that Calvinism embraces many of the things it does: It wants to impose upon God things that guarantee to man that God can do what He says He will do. Your insecurities about God and what He might do aren't a good reason to impose upon Him.
I'm sorry, I thought we were talking about biblical things here. The Bible describes God's promises and a detailed future. The biblical meaning of Hope is the forward looking assurance and belief in a sure and certain thing, a guaranteed outcome. If God can change His mind, if Jesus could have refused the cross (as Bob Enyart believes), and if God utter prophecies that fail, then there are no guarantees. I’m not imposing this view on you; I'm merely explaining the logic in light of OVT claims.
Hilston said:
I already covered this. I'll re-type it here for your convenience:
One of Lucifer's strategies was to question God's authority ("Yea, hath God REALLY said?"). And the Open View claims that God is subject to the concepts of justice, love and relationship.
Umm... We view this topic the same way that you do. These things are God's nature. Anything you accuse us of in this respect, you endure, as well. Those living in glass houses shouldn't throw stones.
Justice and love are God's nature, yes. But the Settled View says that God's nature is essential, not by choice. And as such, God cannot change His mind about being loving or being just, as that would constitute a denial of Himself, which the scriptures say God cannot do. Whereas the Open Theist believes that God has the freedom to stop loving, if He so chose; that God has the freedom to not be just, if He so chose; and has the freedom to not go to the cross, if He so chose. On the Open View, these things are not essential, but only chosen (for now, so far). He could change His mind and become evil, according to Open Theists. Do you not agree with Bob Enyart on this?
Hilston said:
Even though the Open Theist does not acknowledge this, such a God as they describe is subordinate, finite, not ultimate, not infinite. Here is how the Enemy compels men to question God's authority: He suggests that they take Biblical concepts intended for finite man and turn them around and use them against the infinite God, as if God were subject to them.
You're asking
me for examples after your repeated baseless assertions? Fine, here you go: Look at Clete's post above. It betrays a mindset that judges God.
Clete said:
God is just (i.e. righteous) only so long as He remains consistent with the current description of Himself.
See what I mean? "God is just only so long," that is, until Clete sees God do something wrong, such as ceasing to be "consistent with the current description of Himself." As soon as God is inconsistent, that is when Clete will judge Him.
Here's another concrete example:
In my radio debate with Bob Enyart, he stated that he believes Jesus could have refused to go to the cross: "He could have said, 'No; I'm going to pray to my Father to save me." I made the point to Mr. Enyart that Jesus could not have the desire to go against the Father's will. But, Enyart responds, criticizing those who believe that Jesus' death was inevitable and inexorable, saying that Jesus could have chosen to go against the Father's will if He wanted to. Thus, Enyart suggests that Jesus could have sinned against the Father. This is Luciferian at it core and it is a subtle (to some, not to me) attack on the very essence of God. Mr. Enyart says of Jesus going to the cross, "There was another possibility, that He could have called upon legions of angels to save Him." He goes on to say, "If God the Son objected to the Father, had sinned against the Father, that would bring the rebellion in the Godhead." Can you see how Mr. Enyart is putting God in the dock? No one who firmly grasps the concept of God's essential attributes would ever pose the question.
I said to Bob Enyart: "God doesn't have the 'alternative' to
not be what He essentially
is. God is
not free to oppose His own nature.
To my utter amazement, Enyart responded, "I would describe that as putting God in a box." Incredible! The Open Theists take obviously figurative language of the Bible and interpret it literally, and they take obviously nonfigurative language of the Bible and interpret it figuratively.
Later Enyart says, "Jesus Christ could have turned against His Father." In Enyart's view, all of those Old Testament saints who looked forward with Hope to the redemptive death of the suffering servant according to Isaiah's prophecy, it was a real possibility that Jesus would not have fulfilled that prophecy.
When I cited the scripture that says God is unable to deny Himself, pointing out the emphatic wording of the Greek, that God is absolutely without the power to deny Himself, here is how Bob Enyart answered: "That's a figure of speech." He qualifies the verse by saying that God cannot deny Himself and remain righteous. And of course, Mr. Enyart
must distort the scripture to have that meaning, otherwise he undermines his thesis that God can change His mind, even about dying for the salvation of men.
I went on to cite Hebrews 6 that says it is impossible for God to lie, pointing out the Greek wording that emphasizes that God is without the power to do so. Mr. Enyart's response was that it only means that God cannot lie and remain righteous, adding a qualifier that neither the text itself, nor the context connotes. This is an example of how the Open Theism tail wags the Biblical dog. And of course, Mr. Enyart
must twist the scripture to have that meaning, otherwise he undermines his thesis that God can change His mind, even about dying for the salvation of men.
So there's your concrete example. Do you agree with Clete and Bob Enyart?
Hilston said:
This is exactly what Open Theism does. It subordinates God Himself to rules, administered by man. Whenever someone presumes to sit in judgment of God, he is questioning God's authority, just as Lucifer taunted Adam and Eve in the Garden. Furthermore, the only way someone can presume to judge God for His behavior is if man is more than man, and God is less than God. And this speaks to a second strategy of Lucifer, which is to elevate man ("Ye shall be as gods."). Open Theism does this by granting the authority to man to judge God.
LOL... I assume you're being serious, but this is laughable. No OVT sits in judgment of God, nor does any OVT judge God.
Of course no one can
actually do that. It speaks of a
mindset. It is exactly what Lucifer taunted Adam and Eve to do, and when they ate of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, it is exactly the mindset they demonstrated. And they were judged for it.
I can only imagine the amount of twisting and imposition of presuppositions (as we've seen in this post already) that cause you to arrive at this position.
There is no twisting required. It is the logical conclusion of Open View tenets. Go ahead and show otherwise. You would be the first.
If anything, this is a settled theist problem. You make God into a slave of his nature.
Oh, you mean I've put God in a box? The Bible says God is unable to oppose Himself, working all things according to the counsel of His will. The Bible says that it is impossible for God to lie. If there's a box that God is in, it is called His essential nature, and He fully acknowledges this in His word.
You've already said that God can't blow up this universe and start over. So, you stand in judgment of God in that claim.
God says that. He cannot oppose His own decrees. He has decreed the existence of the universe and has guaranteed the full fruition of His promises. God can be trusted to keep His word and to fulfill His promises. The Open Theist, if they follow Bob Enyart, and follow his teachings to their logical conclusions, cannot rationally say this with any surety.
Hilston said:
But unfortunately, that conservative exegetical view of Scripture is distorted by humanism (i.e., Luciferian strategy to elevate man and denigrate God). This is what I'm trying to show you in the above paragraph.
And the above paragraph is the biggest farce I've seen regarding OVT. Again, the amount of twisting and imposition of your own presuppositions you have to arrive at this conclusion is mind boggling. It is so horrible false, I don't even know where to begin.
Please start somewhere. I'm eager to find someone who can show that the conclusions don't follow the premises. So far, you've only made bald unsupported assertions.
Hilston said:
Yet none of them posit the view that God doesn't act to bring about His prophecies, as you asserted.
You just implied that when you claim that God cannot fulfill prophecy without fixing the game beforehand.
God made His plans, and He brings them to fruition. Your assumption that the plan somehow negates their execution is patently absurd.
Hilston said:
… the logical conclusion of Open Theism is that Christ's death was not sufficient because man's permission (free will choice) is the determining factor in whether or not a person is saved.
And this is biblically demonstrable. I've done so many times.
What is? That Christ's death was not sufficient?
The fact that you have a presupposition of individual election and irresistible grace …
I don’t think you know what a presupposition is. Individual election and irresistible grace are not presuppositions. They are conclusions based on certain premises, but not presuppositions.
... because you demand guarantees from God doesn't void a proper exegesis of Scripture.
I make no demands of God whatsoever. God says to trust Him. God says He will not let His Word fail. Those are guarantees that God Himself gives; nothing that is demanded by men.
Hilston said:
So please indulge me, and set me straight on the unscriptural presuppositions I'm imposing on your view.
1) individual election
2) irresistible grace
3) determinism
Where are you getting this? Not once have I imposed these on your view. If anything, I've shown how they do not comport with your view
at all!
... 4) That God's nature somehow makes Him subject to man
That is not a "presupposition imposed" on your view. That is a logical conclusion of your view, which requires man to give God the go-ahead to save him.
... 5) That embracing what God says about Himself in Scripture somehow comes from "Lucifer."
Embracing a distortion of what God says about Himself, as Adam and Eve did in the Garden, does indeed come from Lucifer. Think about it. What did Lucifer do? He took God's words and distorted them in precisely the same way that Open Theism does. And that's
not imposing a presupposition. It's drawing out the logical conclusion. And instead of answering with "LOL! Are you serious?" why don't you show the readers how the conclusions I've stated do not follow from their OpenView premises.
... 6) That OVT is humanistic
It is absolutely humanistic. Would you like to see some concrete proof? I have it in abundance.
... 7) That you have the right to demand guarantees from God.
As I stated above, I make no demands of God whatsoever. God says to trust Him. God says He will not let His Word fail. Those are guarantees that God Himself gives; nothing that is demanded by men.
Lock your car,
Hilston