Hi everyone,
Clete: Sovereignty has to do with authority, not control.
He has delegated to me the authority to live my life the why I want to. And since He has the power and the absolute right to recall that authority at any time, He remains sovereign.
But that's not absolute sovereignty!
Thus God is and always will be the absolute sovereign ruler of all that is.
No, he is not, if God has delegated authority to others, which they can misuse, and do evil that God does not control or intend. I think you are trying to have it both ways here! You can say potential absolute sovereign, or eventual absolute sovereign, but not absolute sovereign, right now, according to the Open View.
Love is the key issue because love, by definition, must be volitional. Without freedom, love cannot exist.
Sure it can!
1 John 4:19 We love because he first loved us.
Not because we chose to! Now the more of God's love we receive, the more we can love him and others, and the more real freedom we can then have. So receiving love, being loved, comes before freedom, I would say, and makes a way for us to love God back, and this allows more and more freedom, and then love becomes freely given, too.
But it's not free at first, I believe!
God simply cannot have given His creation the ability to love Him without taking the risk that they would hate Him.
Yes, but "love never fails" (1 Cor. 13). But how can this be, if people can resist God's love?
Song of Solomon 8:6-7 Place me like a seal over your heart, like a seal on your arm; for love is as strong as death, its jealousy unyielding as the grave. It burns like blazing fire, like a mighty flame. Many waters cannot quench love; rivers cannot wash it away.
And that's talking about human love!
Z Man: If the future does not exist, then God cannot proclaim the future. And, as Jonathan Edwards once said, if God can't foreknow the future, then "in vain has God himself often spoken of the predictions of his Word, as evidences of . . . his peculiar glory, greatly distinguishing him from all other beings."
That's true, if God is only guessing, then all the challenges to the idols fall down. A lot hinges on our view of God's foreknowledge! For if God knows the future, then he's not taking risks like we do.
God_Is_Truth: here are bible verses that support (in one way or another) an open future ...
Genesis 2:19 He brought them to the man to see what he would name them...
Let's read on, then!
Genesis 2:20 But for Adam no suitable helper was found...
So was God looking for a helper for Adam among the animals? Did he not know that he needed to create Eve, before he did this?
So I think this shows us that here God is speaking from man's perspective, not his own, and similarly with other verses like this one.
Genesis 6:6 The Lord was grieved that he had made man on the earth, and his heart was filled with pain.
In verses such as these, the question to ask is: "What does this imply, that God didn't think would happen?" Now here, we have to say God did not think man would rebel so much. Well, that might be possible. But in other instances, we get some astonishing implications:
Why didn't God just destroy the Ninevites, why did he send Jonah, and spoil his plan? Why did Jonah seem to have a better grasp of the situation than God did? Jonah thought the Ninevites would likely repent, and God, apparently, did not.
Why didn't God think Moses would pray yet one more time for forgiveness for the rebellious Israelites, when he had done so, on each previous occasion?
And similarly, in other instances...
Z Man: Too much Scriptural evidence points to Him predestining than is to be ignored...
GIT: too much? i see much more pointing away...
Well, it's the Open View's turn to explain some verses!
PS 33:11 But the plans of the Lord stand firm forever, the purposes of his heart through all generations.
PS 139:16 All the days ordained for me were written in your book before one of them came to be.
I think there are quite reasonable explanations for the "apparently open future" verses, and no reasonable explanations, for the "predestination" ones:
ISA 46:9-10 Remember the former things, those of long ago; I am God, and there is no other; I am God, and there is none like me. I make known the end from the beginning, from ancient times, what is still to come. I say: My purpose will stand, and I will do all that I please.
Now if God doesn't know the future, and if it can get out of his control and cross his purposes, how can he do "all his good pleasure"? Doesn't the Open View hold that God can experience frustration? And yet this verse says clearly, that he cannot.
EPH 1:11 In him we were also chosen, having been predestined according to the plan of him who works out everything in conformity with the purpose of his will...
Everything includes, well, everything!
Blessings,
Lee