by mattrose on Sat Oct 06, 2012 8:22 am
Papa J,
Most of the bullet-points you provided as proofs that God knows the future can be fairly easily explained by open theists. First, any open theist I've read (Pinnock, Boyd, Sanders) knows that God can control what God is going to do in the future, and therefore that future is 'set in stone' so to speak. This observation alone renders most of your points obsolete. Second, some of the bullet points you gave simply demonstrate a cause-and-effect relationship that God has built into the fabric of the world. They are not so much 'prophecies' as 'consequences.' Third, some of the points you raised could be predicted by a being who had ALL the 'present' facts. Certainly God is such a being. Thus, the problem isn't that Open Theists don't read their Bibles like you do, it is that they interpret it differently. Whereas you may find their interpretation of prophecy ridiculous, they may equally find your interpretation of passages where it seems God doesn't know the future as quite convenient.
Papa J’s reply:
Well I would really love to hear your refutation since my points are “
fairly easily explained by open theists” or copy a quote from “Pinnock’s, Boyd or Sanders” dealing with any of those bullet-points instead of reading your polite brush off by saying “
most of” my points were obsolete and “
some of” my points could be predicted by a being (not God) who had all the facts and of course this is my point that the God of Open Theism could actually be one of the Mormon (glorified men) gods. The point I’m making clear in this paragraph is that your reply is like being bush-wacked instead of “
iron sharpening iron;” it is only fair since I took the time to list these (from the top of my head) for you to deal with some or most of them so others can judge (like SinglePhile) for themselves, unless you just won’t do the homework. It’s why I posted in an earlier post, “please don’t reply unless you read the entire post,” I’m not here to dish out sass, but to sharpen iron with brothers, I just wish Steve had more free time.
I’m sorry I did not mean to reply that ‘Open Theists don’t read their Bibles’ its people like SinglePhile who are being influenced by ‘Open Theism’ who have not spent 40-years reading and studying the Scriptures. And actually their interpretation of the Scriptures is logical, as is Calvinism if their presupposition was correct. I don’t fault their conclusion, for if I was still dispensational and hardcore against Calvinism, I would have to agree with them, but as Steve and I both reject the Reformation and Dispensational presuppositions, I find the presuppositional theory both groups read the Scriptures through to be ridiculous. I just want to make it clear to people like SinglePhile that it is not possible to interpret Scriptures several different ways, (at least I hope Matt doesn’t think that way) the reason people come to different conclusions has to do with the preconceived ideas they approach the Scriptures with.
Example: Since you brought up prophecy, you possibly believe the ‘Age of Israel was over with the coming of the New Covenant, then you might conclude AD 70 was the only Tribulation Jesus was speaking of in
Matthew 24, but the New Covenant came 40-years before AD 70 and according to Bible history the age for the nation of Israel was over with their captivities and (except for Jesus) Israel never ever had a king to rule in the land of Israel. Now if you believed the ‘Age of Israel’ was over some 500 to 800 years before Jesus arrived. And you believed
Jeremiah 31:31-34 was correct in predicting the New Covenant, foretelling God’s restoration for the descendants of Israel and Judah, then the Jews (descendants of the house of Judah) being saved at Pentecost and those from nations speaking some 15 different languages; Jews and proselytes were some of the nations where the descendants of the house of Israel were scattered, then Jews and Gentiles (nations) being saved within the New Covenant fulfill
Jeremiah 31:31-34. Then you just might conclude that
Matthew 24 would be describing the period of time between Jesus departure and return for His followers, instead of spiritualizing Israel the way Calvinist and Steve Gregg do.
Matt Rose continued with:
P. Simmond has already responded well to your statements about free will. You agree that the Bible does teach human responsibility. Free will, rather than being a word we must find in a concordance, is a necessary ingredient to true responsibility. It's built right into the word. Responsibility includes the 'ability' to 'respond.' That is pretty much all the 'free will' doctrine insists upon... and even then it is only under the rubric of God's initiating grace. Free will doesn't include any sort of belief in unlimited choice, as you suggest. We must act within the boundaries of what God allows (what other 'choice' do we have?). Your willingness to use terms like responsibility and choice shows that you don't actually disagree with what the rest of us mean by free will.
Papa J’s reply:
If you read my reply to P. Simmond you would know I was trying to show the distinction between what people think the theory of ‘Free Will’ is and how it is confused with our freedom to make choices. And no it is not “pretty much all the 'free will' doctrine insists upon,” would you please explain to me what you think “the ‘free will’ doctrine is? The point I was making is that we have the freedom to choose between good and evil, right and wrong, blue and green, but the theological doctrine of ‘Free Will’ is about God choosing you and the reaction to the Calvinistic perversion (God choosing the elect to be saved before the earth was created) is that you are the one who chooses to be saved or chooses God.
My conclusion from Scripture is that God’s choosing is evidenced by the Holy Spirit convicting us of sin and if we resist, it would be open rebellion against our Creator, not our freedom to believe or not believe. Now the way ignorant preachers, teachers and Bible students (mindless parrots) present ‘Free Will’ is that it is your choice to believe or not believe, to ask Jesus into your heart because you don’t want to go to hell. The problem with the theological doctrine of ‘Free Will’ is the false gospel that goes with it; that you can be saved because God loves and wants you to come to heaven when you die, this is in contrast to what
John 1:13 teaches when John tells us it is not “the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God” which is dealing with, the new birth, to be born from above, to be born of God! The true Gospel is that we are sinners separated from God because of our sin and the Good News is that Jesus died for our sins; then we become convinced through the Holy Spirit that we need a savior and that Savior is Jesus. Then somewhere in the midst of all of this we believe Jesus died for our sins and we confess to others that we believe.
Also I did not say anything about, “Free will doesn't include any sort of belief in unlimited choice, as you suggest.” I suggested no such thing! I was arguing for the opposite that our decisions have been limited not unlimited. I was stating what you said, “We must act within the boundaries of what God allows (what other 'choice' do we have?).” Exactly, I could not have said it better in one sentence.
Matt Rose continued with:
Nor do I believe that God can choose what to know. God knows all things. The Open Theism debate, if we may go back to that for a second, is not a debate about whether God knows all things. It is a debate about whether the future is a thing.
Papa J’s reply:
Well I’m not going to play Clinton’s “is” game, the truth is that Clinton was sexually involved with a woman and he tried to play a word game to manipulate the truth, so if God knows all things, He knows the future, whither or not it is “ '
set in stone' ” prophecy. This is the problem when a false presupposition runs into a stone wall that can’t be moved, very intelligent men have to play word games instead of admitting the Avenue they are on is a ‘
Dead End’ and they have to turn around.