“His dominion is an everlasting dominion, And His kingdom endures from generation to generation. All the inhabitants of the earth are accounted as nothing, But He does according to His will in the host of heaven And among the inhabitants of earth; And no one can ward off His hand Or say to Him, ‘What have You done?’”11
Man’s actions do not inhibit God. On the contrary, Job asserted, “[Man’s] days are determined, The number of his months is with You; You have appointed his limits, so that he cannot pass.”12 One eternal, prescient, sovereign Lord authors history. The characters cannot limit or control God who “works all things after the counsel of His will”12 – He appoints their limits. He is the sovereign Lord. Open theism’s god cannot compare to the eternal Creator, the prescient God, and the sovereign Lord. Open theism exchanges the true God in all of His magnificence for a watered-down god – a super-man at best – frantically rushing to correct glitches in his plan caused by our decisions. This god cannot guarantee anything. His promises are mere conjecture – even he can’t know if they are trustworthy. We can’t look for a happy ending to history because the author has no control over its course. He is not in control. Only the God of Scripture offers true assurance. He proclaims, “I am God, and there is no one like Me, Declaring the end from the beginning, And from ancient times things which have not been done, Saying, ‘My purpose will be established, And I will accomplish all My good pleasure.’”14 Praise God that He is the eternal Creator, the prescient God, and the sovereign Lord!
1. John Sanders, “Divine Suffering in an Openness of God Perspective,” in The Sovereignty of God, ed. D. Stephen Long and George Kalantzis (Eugene: Wipf and Stock, 2009), 113, accessed November 19, 2014.2. John Sanders, “Divine Suffering in an Openness of God Perspective,” in The Sovereignty of God, ed. D. Stephen Long and George Kalantzis (Eugene: Wipf and Stock, 2009), 112, accessed November 19, 2014.3. NKJV, Genesis 1:14. 2 Peter 3:85. John Sanders, “Divine Suffering in an Openness of God Perspective,” in The Sovereignty of God, ed. D. Stephen Long and George Kalantzis (Eugene: Wipf and Stock, 2009), 113, accessed November 19, 2014.6. Acts 15:187. Genesis 22:128. John Gill, The Cause of God and Truth (n.p.: Providence Baptist Ministries, n.d.), under “3:7”, accessed November 24, 2014.9. John Sanders, “Divine Suffering in an Openness of God Perspective,” in The Sovereignty of God, ed. D. Stephen Long and George Kalantzis (Eugene: Wipf and Stock, 2009), 118, accessed November 19, 2014.10. John Sanders, The God Who Risks (n.p.: ReadHowYouWant.com, 2010), 8, accessed November 24, 201411. Daniel 4:34-3512. Job 14:513. Ephesians 1:1114. Isaiah 46:10
Comments
From the way you phrase
From the way you phrase yourself around it, it seems as if you agree with the quote “God had, from eternity, a prescience or foreknowledge of all future events; of all future contingencies, even of the free actions of men's wills; of every thing that should be done in time, to the end of the world, and to all eternity.” Yet this author seems to believe in free will, and you obviously do not.
I believe that God is outside of time and knows the future even as he knows the past (both of which concepts are largely irrelevant to an eternal being), but that man still has freedom to act according to his own will. 2 Peter 3:9 says that it is God's desire that none should perish, but he permits men to perish if they would rather go against him than dwell forever in him. He's not constantly backpedaling against our rebellions which disrupt his plan because his entire plan is to offer salvation to each and every one of us. Thus, his plan is already accomplished, and what is there for our freedoms to thwart?
Maddi: Thank you. Leinad:
Maddi: Thank you.
Leinad: Before I answer your questions, do you mind explaining exactly what you mean by free will?
“D’ye know what Calvary was? What? What? What? It was damnation; and he took it lovingly.”
~John Duncan
I'm actually in a theology
I'm actually in a theology class at a Christian university right now, and we've spend several hours on free will vs divine foreknowledge. I don't come down as a hard Calvinist or Armenian. Do humans have free will or does God have divine foreknowledge...um, yes. Just yes. But open theism is, indeed, a distortion of Biblical truth.
Formerly Kestrel
This is really good. I had a
This is really good. I had a couple of questions as I was reading, but the essay answered them.
Free Will
I don't have much experience with theology and theological terminology, but I suppose I would describe free will as the ability to choose, uncompelled, between more than one course of action, i.e. the opposite of determinism. For example, tomorrow I could have eggs for breakfast, or I could skip breakfast and go on a killing spree, and from the perspective of the present it is not yet determined which of these things I will do.
Kestrel/Julie: I agree
Kestrel/Julie: I agree entirely. I hold to reformed doctrine, yet I agree that extremist Calvinism is something to avoid. I suppose that Open Theism could be described as an extreme form of Arminianism.
Hannah D.: Thank you.
Leinad: I would agree that from the perspective of finite man, the future is indeed undetermined. However, we both agree that God knows the future perfectly. Thus, from his perspective, the future is determined. Open theology claims that an action, in order to be truly free must be contingent and uncaused. This is why they deny the sovereignty of God, an attribute clearly taught in Scripture.
In affirming the sovereignty of God, I am not denying free will. Both free will and the sovereignty of God are affirmed in Scripture.
“D’ye know what Calvary was? What? What? What? It was damnation; and he took it lovingly.”
~John Duncan
:)
I love reading your essays, Benjamin. They are clear, very clear. I only skimmed this, because of time shortage, but your essays are always enlightening to read. The last paragraph is powerful and conclusive. Well done.
Goodbye? Oh no, please. Can’t we just go back to page one and start all over again?” – Winnie The Pooh