Hi Clete,
Thanks for your reply, I appreciate your comments, and the discussion…
And the phrase "surely, surely" does not make it a certain prediction any more than any other Biblical prophecy.
But why not, though? Saying "This is sure" means … it's sure! Let's not take the approach of discounting when God says something is certain:
Genesis 3:4 "You will not surely die," the serpent said to the woman.
Clete: "Surely, surely" was a common Hebrew idiomatic expression used for emphasis. It did not have the meaning that the simple English words might seem to convey.
This does indeed mean "This is very important," but does it not also mean "This statement is true"?
"Since Jesus' words are preceded by the solemn 'I tell you the truth,' they are not to be taken lightly. To suggest that Jesus was mistaken in the statement he made in this verse but that the mistake was in a matter of such small consequence that it makes no difference is to fail to take seriously the solemnity of the introductory words." (Expositor's Bible Commentary, on Mark 13:30).
Matthew 5:18 Truly, until heaven and earth disappear, not the smallest letter, not the least stroke of a pen, will by any means disappear from the Law until everything is accomplished.
This seems to be more than just an underline on this sentence! Similarly, here:
Matthew 10:42 And if anyone gives even a cup of cold water to one of these little ones because he is my disciple, I tell you the truth, he will certainly not lose his reward.
The term "verily" is the equivalent of "amen" and when used at the beginning of a statement it was conveying that what was being spoken was a truth, that he who was speaking was telling the truth.
Yes, but now must we say this means "This is a true emphasis?" This is important? Is that all that it means? I think the meaning is clearly more than just that:
Matthew 13:17 For I tell you the truth, many prophets and righteous men longed to see what you see but did not see it, and to hear what you hear but did not hear it.
Is that not really true?
Matthew 18:3 And he said: "I tell you the truth, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven."
Is it possible to enter heaven without this transformation? Why do we read "Truly," "Assuredly," "I tell you the truth," in the various translations, if what is meant is really only "This is important"? I think the translators are not all mistaken, in this…
In fact all prophecy that has to do with people must be subject to such stipulations or else God would not be good, He would not be just. Indeed, if Jer. 18 was not in the Bible, Christianity would be completely incoherent…
But how is it required that God's ways conflict with his knowledge? If Jesus knows for sure that Peter will deny him, how does that counter how God will respond to rebellion or repentance, as shown in Jer. 18? I think these are two separate issues.
Lee: God at least made a conscious decision to allow it, he could have prevented it, thus in both views, he has responsibility.
Clete: Are parents responsible for their children's sins because they could have prevented those sins by having refused to bear children in the first place?
But God is not just starting people out! He sees each deed that is done, he oversees it, and could stop any of them. So there is some primary responsibility here, in both views, God decides not to prevent it, for some greater good that he sees.
Lee: which verses would you pick, to show that God's ultimate purpose cannot be thwarted, and why would such verses not apply to every plan God makes?
Clete: What "ultimate plan" are you referring to?
Whatever the Open View says God will ultimately accomplish. How would this be supported in Scripture, while showing that there is room (in those Scriptures!) for some of God's plans to fail.
Clete: If it turns out that the whole lot is evil then He will justly punish the whole lot, and in so doing will remain the Absolute All in All, Alpha and Omega that He has always been. That doesn't sound like a defeat to me! Does it to you?
Yes, if God set out to save them, it's a defeat…
Lee: And doesn't God know how he would act, in any completely described situation? If so, does this make all of God's actions not be free?
Clete: I don't believe that God would necessarily know what He would do. The actions of God are not determined by some causal line of events.
I agree with your second point here, yet how can God not know all there is to know about himself? Knowing how he would act, if this happened, or that happened, I would say is part of God's omniscience. What purpose would there be for delaying, except to extricate the Open Theists from this predicament?
Lee: Though [Gen 22:17-18] also does refer to spiritual children, how can this not at all refer to Isaac's children?
Clete: Grace applies to both Jew and Gentile, does it not? No one has said that it doesn't apply to the Jew.
I agree! Then does this not apply to Isaac and his physical descendants? Then I think we have to invoke foreknowledge, to explain the difference being conditional here, and unconditional in Gen. 15:18.
Clete: Also, it seems, any statement made by God where He has sworn by Himself would be something that could not be undone or left unfulfilled.
Then may we ask about this statement?
Isaiah 45:23 By myself I have sworn, my mouth has uttered in all integrity a word that will not be revoked: Before me every knee will bow; by me every tongue will swear.
What if some will not bow? Or here:
Psalm 89:35-36 Once for all, I have sworn by my holiness-- and I will not lie to David-- that his line will continue forever and his throne endure before me like the sun.
What if the descendants of David all run into the sea?
Clete: But any promise made by God toward man can be considered subject to the conditional principles laid down most clearly in Jer. 18. … God said that His declarations are conditional and explained why, who are we to argue?
Because God does seem to make unconditional promises, that depend on human decisions:
Isaiah 45:13 I will raise up Cyrus in my righteousness: I will make all his ways straight. He will rebuild my city and set my exiles free, but not for a price or reward, says the Lord Almighty.
God could indeed tell us all his promises are conditional, but Jer. 18 doesn't say that, it tells us how God responds, not whether he can predict (or know) our responses accurately.
For example: "If you sit on the seesaw, the other side will go up, if you get off, the other side will go down." Now that doesn't tell us whether I can predict if you will sit on the seesaw!
Psalm 32:10 … the Lord's unfailing love surrounds the man who trusts in him.
Lee: Now does this mean that every promise of God loving someone is now conditional?
1 Chronicles 17:13 I will never take my love away from him…
Clete: … concerning love in the context of favor or blessing, such is always conditional, always.
Well, then everyone could rebel! Even in heaven, and no one will ever be secure.
Lee: I don't think those passages are so clear where God seems to be frustrated, and I do think the verses that speak of the principle of God succeeding without fail are quite clear, so I think we should take the second set to interpret the first…
Clete: What could the countless passages mean that show God to be frustrated then? What could they possibly mean?
"Nacham" could mean grief, or a change in response, though not a change of plan, "nacham" has those meanings, that meaning is possible…
Psalm 33:10-11 The Lord foils the plans of the nations; he thwarts the purposes of the peoples. But the plans of the Lord stand firm forever, the purposes of his heart through all generations.
This is a contrast between man's purposes, and God's purposes, and it seems to clearly say that God's purposes always prevail, how else could this be interpreted, without simply denying the words here?
Clete: … the Bible says, "Out of the ground the LORD God formed every beast of the field and every bird of the air, and brought them to Adam to see what he would call them. (Genesis 2:19)…
Let's read on, though!
Genesis 2:20 But for Adam no suitable helper was found.
Now should we conclude that God didn't know that no animal would be suitable, without going through all of them, one by one here? Surely not. And then similarly in verse 19, we must, I think, say this is speaking from Adam's perspective, as in saying "Where should this fork go on the table?" when we know where it belongs.
Clete: "I will go down now and see whether they have done altogether according to the outcry against it that has come to Me; and if not, I will know." (Genesis 18:21), the typical Calvinist explanation is "of course God already knew..."
But doesn't the Open View hold that God has exhaustive knowledge of the present? And this is not even about the present, it's about the past! "If they have done…" Doesn't God know all about the past? Thus I would take this as instead referring to experiential knowledge, such as when I say "I know the water is cold." I jump in. Now I
know the water is cold!
Lee: Or else God is responsible for salvation! That's the other alternative.
Clete: You simply must keep in mind that this thing we call life is real. We aren't playing some sort of trivial game that doesn't have any real consequence.
I agree, I believe that God's children can really choose, though unbelievers can't, and yet God is just in punishing sin, because even unbelievers participate in their sin, in their motives, and God bears sin, as well.
Clete: You don't really believe that Nostradamus actually had the ability to predict the future do you? I mean really?
I just mean he (and the futurists, etc.) are able to predict in the same way God does, thus there is no essential distinction in God's predictions. But he makes a distinction!
Isaiah 41:26 Who told of this from the beginning, so we could know, or beforehand, so we could say, 'He was right'? No one told of this, no one foretold it.
Isaiah 41:23 Tell us what the future holds, so we may know that you are gods.
I think this means a sure prediction, otherwise the challenge is an empty one, for then everyone can make their best estimate, and there is no distinction.
Lee: but then we also hear interpretations saying God predicted and it didn't turn out! So it seems we may be trying to have it both ways here, I must ask, "Can God declare the end from the beginning, or can't he?"
Clete: He has demonstrated His ability to do just that and has CLEARLY explained how an exception MIGHT occur in Jer. 18. How else could Jer. 18 have any meaning at all?
But Jer. 18 is explaining God's ways, not his ability to predict. If exceptions might occur, then the answer is "No, God cannot declare the end from the beginning," in most of what concerns us, where the outcome depends to a degree on human decisions.
Lee: I think being rescued from every evil attack involves my decisions, as well as others, though! Do we now have to conclude I shall always choose the way I should, so I can be rescued?
Clete: I don't care what you choose or don't choose. Once you boarded the Body of Christ, your destination (destiny) was sealed…
Yes, but this doesn't guarantee I will be rescued from every evil attack. The warfare worldview says I might not be, yet Paul says he will be…
Clete: God can no more make people love Him than He can make the square root of 2 a whole number. Nor could He create a being capable of loving Him without taking the risk of being rejected. That's the nature of love, that's the nature of reality. Otherwise, love is meaningless.
Well, Scripture indicates our love has a cause, though:
Psalm 116:1 I love, because…
1 John 4:19 We love because he first loved us.
Not because we chose to! We must love with God's love, not with our own:
1 John 4:7 … for love comes from God.
I do think we tend to view the end of the process, when people can love freely, and not the beginning, when infants need to be loved, in order to have love to give.
Clete: Universalism is irrational and therefore fundamentally unbiblical. If universalism is what you are driving at here, let me just tell you that I'm simply unwilling to discuss it.
I won't insist on reviewing this, then. I do wonder how it is inherently impossible for God to save everyone, though.
Blessings,
Lee