If it can be shown that God absolutely knows the future, definitively, then the OV is shown to be false.
The following is such an example. When the disciples asked Jesus when He was coming back The Master said that no one not even He that day and hour This was a secret known only by the Father. If Open Theism were true even the Father could not know anything so specific as the day and hour. God could for whatever reason pick a day and hour. He could say that the Son of Man will return to earth 6/6/2066 at 6:66 am CST. The probability of this happening would be 100% as long as His prediction was not conditioned upon the acts of free agents. This, however, is not the case.
This doesn't work. No one can change God's mind on the date except God, especially since He is the only One who knows. Thus it is possible for Him to know specifically without the OV being false. Since the OV doesn't say God can't know any future event for certain.
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I completely agree with this.
Shasta:
Lighthouse:
What the debate needs to account for is God's faithfulness. Prophecy is only very rarely about prediction of the future. Rather it is about announcing God's mind. God can plan to do something and if he wants to do it enough, then it is guaranteed to happen so the only doubt that can possibly exist over that future event is God himself changing his mind. If God knows some future thing 100% certainly, then he himself is bound to that future and hence loses his ability to do anything differently to what he knows with certainty will happen. He effectively becomes impotent. In open theism, the mechanism through which God can know the future is his own desire/intention to perform some action. So the openness of the future consists of God's ability to change it or to intervene at any time. This is what his sovereignty consists of; that is what sovereignty means.
But faithfulness means that God's creatures need to rely on God for provision, for consistency in the world and for love. His ability to change anything at any time is chacterised by his love for his creatures, which means that in his sovereign expression, he acts with consistency and predictability. So the uncertain future is rendered predictable. That means that we can get on with our lives and have purpose. It means that the future can be meaningful and not random.
I was just thinking of the whole “only the Father knows the day and hour” so OV is false. Didn’t God know that Hezekiah would not recover from his illness and even tell him so? But Hezekiah’s prayers changed the date of Hezekiah’s death. After his prayers, God then said he’d have an additional 15 years. Sounds like Hezekiah’s death was conditional. Isn’t the day of Christ’s return conditional? So, even if the Father had an exact day and hour planned out, can’t He change it based on conditions not being met?
You could be right.As an Arminian, I used to think Christ did not know because of the limitations of the incarnation. Now, as an Open Theist, I believe that He did not know because the exact minute was not settled yet by the Father (future partially open). When the Father knows/decides, the Son will then know. When Jesus made this statement, the date was not even settled in the Father's mind and was contingent on the extent of evangelism, rejection by Israel, etc.
I was just thinking of the whole “only the Father knows the day and hour” so OV is false. Didn’t God know that Hezekiah would not recover from his illness and even tell him so? But Hezekiah’s prayers changed the date of Hezekiah’s death. After his prayers, God then said he’d have an additional 15 years. Sounds like Hezekiah’s death was conditional. Isn’t the day of Christ’s return conditional? So, even if the Father had an exact day and hour planned out, can’t He change it based on conditions not being met?
I think there's something to what you're saying. Scripture seems to suggest that wickedness will increase and be at an all-time high just before Messiah's return.You seem to have concluded that day and hour means its already on the calendar. I think the day and hour could be when God's creation (the field) no longer reaps a harvest. I thing that was the condition that lead to the Flood.
God wants as many believer with Him in heaven as possible. He paid the ultimate price for that through the death of His Son. I think He will patiently squeeze as much faith out of His creation as He can.
I don't know for sure that I am right, but that's what's possible with the OV.
The idea that "He WILL know" (at some point in the future) is not suggested in the verse. The word "know" is not conjugated in the future tense but in the perfect tense which indicates a PAST action that has been completed. Moreover it is about seeing and perceiving rather that the "experience learning" associated with the other word for know "ginosko" When Jesus was speaking of His coming He was saying the father already knew it and the matter was closed. This is just grammar,
Again the "sense" of the verse is that the Father had "a (specific) secret" not that He would at some undermined time in the future make a judgment call.
I understand your interpretation of Mark 13:32 & Matthew 24:36 for it is the view of the majority; but again I'm saying it does not deviate from the fact of God knowing the time, for when the time comes He will know based on whatever is entailed within His will for it to be the time, it doesn't change anything if Christ regards the conditions or seasons or requirements of that time, for even the believer is called to have wisdom and perceive such things. I can not differentiate between God having foreknowledge of said time when He will send Christ again, and God knowing now is the time to send Christ. It's all based on how you read it. An analogy is a wife asking her husband, when he will get a raise at work; the husband responds with, only my boss knows the day and the hour. Meaning the boss didn't exact a certain time and date, but will know when the time is right based on an assessment of the productivity of his employee, and will make the decision to up his pay. Either way the centrality of each view is based on the premise God knows the right time, whether He foreknew when He chose the right time to be, or He ordained when it would come about, or He decided after accessing the state of everything as being the right time; it's more just an argument of words, rather then any real dispute regarding His omniscience or sovereignty.
I was just thinking of the whole “only the Father knows the day and hour” so OV is false. Didn’t God know that Hezekiah would not recover from his illness and even tell him so? But Hezekiah’s prayers changed the date of Hezekiah’s death. After his prayers, God then said he’d have an additional 15 years. Sounds like Hezekiah’s death was conditional. Isn’t the day of Christ’s return conditional? So, even if the Father had an exact day and hour planned out, can’t He change it based on conditions not being met?
I wouldn’t say this is accurate, because the God of the open view is just as prepared for the future as the God of the settled view. It’s just that the God of the OV requires more wisdom, resourcefulness and intelligence than the God of the settled view. He is not “surprised” in that He is taken off-guard, but He can be disappointed hoping that another path would have been taken.The God of Open Theism is always being "surprised"
In a sense, yes, God is always “becoming” (i.e. “I will be who I will be” -- אהיה אשׁר אהיה). This expression, ehyeh, indicates He is dynamic rather than static, perpetually realizing Himself. God, the author of all life, is certainly not static. Change is part of being alive!In fact every moment of time will bring more knowledge as well as more that is unknowable. God will always be learning.
Not necessarily. Man's depravity, and capacity for such, is well known to God: history bears it out; thus it is completely reasonable for God to predict such will be the case. Man has yet to prove otherwise.
The series of events prophetic of Christs return are not really in the same category as God answering a person's prayer. Sometimes God changes the course of our lives, saves us from some consequence which would have happened to us had we done nothing. God gives us a lot of responsibility and even discretion. God shows prophetic foreknowledge (not the term as used in Open Theism) because He does know what people will choose to do sometimes thousands of years in advance.
Prophecies and promises have been known to be conditional long before the latter day advent of Open Theology. Historically, it was believed that men made real choices but that the transcendent God rather than predestining them to make those choices simply foreknew what they would do.
God as defined in Open Theology cannot possess true foreknowledge because He is linked with the temporal spatial universe. Being within the time line He is unable to stand outside it to see anything other than the past, the present or events that He Himself has decided to cause or allow to happen and then only if those events are not changed through the prayers of free agents
The God of Open Theism is always being "surprised"Since the future does not exist what is "knowable" to Him is mostly in the present. Of course what is not "knowable" to Him today will be tomorrow. In fact every moment of time will bring more knowledge as well as more that is unknowable. God will always be learning.
I wouldn’t say this is accurate, because the God of the open view is just as prepared for the future as the God of the settled view. It’s just that the God of the OV requires more wisdom, resourcefulness and intelligence than the God of the settled view. He is not “surprised” in that He is taken off-guard, but He can be disappointed hoping that another path would have been taken.
In a sense, yes, God is always “becoming” (i.e. “I will be who I will be” -- אהיה אשׁר אהיה). This expression, ehyeh, indicates He is dynamic rather than static, perpetually realizing Himself. God, the author of all life, is certainly not static. Change is part of being alive!
Well, if it was a truthful answer then why would you want the answer to be any different to what it was?thus at many points it would be possible that you could ask the teacher when He would be returning and He would say "I do not know the answer to that one and even the Father does not know yet." What kind of an answer was that?
I don't mind the label Open Theist and I'd willingly use it to describe myself, but...
...I get the impression that much of what we might present as Open Theists of God changing things, could easily have been planned by God a long time ago. Thus, while the freedom God has to act or not act remains unquestioned (by me), the chances that what He does being uncertain or contingent might be essentially zero.
And, for the life of me, I can't think of a good example to better describe this right now. :noid:
God did not create man and say it is good knowing full-well what in short order sodomites would do with the human anatomy. Before creating God could conceive of a rebellion but He did not think through every possible perversity, including the ones humans haven’t got around to yet.
So God’s creation, in my mind, is not complete or else He would be the author of all the sin that is part of it. God finished building, but He did not finish experiencing the decisions of the free agents that He made. We are helping God write the final chapter of His creation.
God reacts to what humans do. That is why we should be amazed at his mercy, grace and patience.
Me too. But I find it too easy to imagine that what looks like contingency was accounted for long before it happened.
Can God be surprised by a man's decision? I think yes. But it would have to be some pretty extraordinary circumstances.
Anyway... :think: