After hearing his name brought up recently, I have been reading up on a little bit of Seventh-Day Adventist Richard Rice's theology, specifically his book God's Foreknowledge and Man's Free Will. His interaction with both free will and Predestinarianism was a unique and insightful approach, espically concerning the problem of God's foreknowledge and libertarian free will.
The dilemma I wish to present would be that concerning the question of the relationship between free will and the sovereignty of God. The following is a sample from Dr. John Frame's Philosophy: A Christian Perspective:
Do you believe that this is an accurate critique of Arminianism by John Frame? Or would you consider it excessive? Thanks for the input!
The dilemma I wish to present would be that concerning the question of the relationship between free will and the sovereignty of God. The following is a sample from Dr. John Frame's Philosophy: A Christian Perspective:
A number of [open-theistic] writers come out of the Arminian theological tradition, and their open theism is a response to a problem in Arminian theology. Traditional Arminianism teaches (1) that man has libertarian freedom, so God does not control all things, and (2) that God nevertheless foreknows everything that comes to pass. Arminians think (2) is important in the doctrine of salvation. They do not want to maintain, with Calvinists, that God chooses (elects) people to salvation merely by his own power. Rather, they want to affirm that God foreknows how each person will respond (freely) to his offers of grace and prepares his blessings accordingly.
But if God foreknows everything that happens, he thereby renders every event certain. If God knew in 1931 that I would write this book in 2013, then it would certainly happen. I would not be free to avoid writing it. So if God foreknows everything, everything that happens must happen, and there can be no libertarian free will.* There are two possible solutions to this dilemma: either deny libertarian free will (as in Calvinism) or deny exhaustive divine foreknowledge. Open theists choose the second alternative.
*This is true even if we reject the notion that God makes everything happen. The relevant point is the certain occurrence of all events, whether by divine action or some other determining factor(s). In our example, if God did not make me write the book, then someone or something else did, and it is on the basis of that causality that God foreknew my writing of the book. So exhaustive divine foreknowledge implies determinism, whether or not that determinism is the result of divine causality.
Do you believe that this is an accurate critique of Arminianism by John Frame? Or would you consider it excessive? Thanks for the input!