Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.
We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!
If God acts in ways that we cannot understand then, we cannot speak about it logically. If in all of His ways we cannot understand then, we cannot speak about it logicall or come to any reasonable opinions on the matter.thing is that God can handle the implications that would arise from Him being absolute sovereign, and yet he can still interact 'freely' with His creation, but we as finite minds cannot!
Well... let me think about that... If he predestines it how is that different than determining it? ...hmmm... Are you saying that he can predestine a single event but has multiple ways in which he causes it to happen? In that case He's still ultimately or finally causing it to happen, right? Maybe it's not both, like you say, but the difference is without distinction in the end, no? ...you may be correct but I'd have to have it explained to me a little more.Also, it seems that some in Open theism see us saying God has predestined all things that happen, but also that he determined all things that happened..
Does not have to be both!
That is how I understood it as well. But, how can that be explained? The bigger problem I have with that idea is that one has to come to the Bible with that philosophy already assumed to get those conclusions from the Bible. All passages relating to time/eternity can be reasonably understood from the perspective of everlasting-ness. And, what's more is that some (many or most?) verses pertaining to time/eternity specifically imply or even state a temporal, everlasting-ness. These two statements cannot be said for the 'timeless', 'eternal now' view.We state that He exists outside time/Spece/matter/Energy his creation, but that he interacts with it also...
Which I am willing to admit, that this is a consistent and coherent view only if you will concede that not a single possibility can therefore exist. Do you concede such? I will commend you for being consistent if you do! What all systems of thought must acknowledge and not deny is that a 'thing' cannot 'exist' and 'not exist' simultaneously in the same way. (Explanation: If God believes it is not a possibility then it cannot be a possibility, regardless of whether we are convinced that it is a possibility and base our decisions on that illusion.)And that from beginning of the Universe, unto new heavens and earth, eternal state, he knows already, right now what will happen..
My point exactly... except that if He's as sovereign as the Cals say he is then nothing can be allowed so He is content for us to think He allowed something...From our point of view, make our decisions and choices "freely", but the Lord already knew beforehand what would bedone, just some he directly caused, others allowed...
I've not seen this before but it's an interesting acronym. I am not convinced that any of this is necessarily inaccurate.
The ROSE Acronym:
R - Responsibility (Libertarian Freewill)
God has granted free agents significant freedom and responsibility to make moral choices for which they are culpable and upon which at least part of the future hangs. The choices of free agents effect others, the future, and God.
O - Openness
God knows all of reality as it is. In the scriptural 'Motif of Future Openness,' God speaks of and knows the possible, future choices of free agents as possibilities. God allows the future to remain open to the extent God chooses. Therefore, the future is partly open.
S - Sovereignty
God knows all of reality as it is. In the scriptural 'Motif of Future Determinism,' God speaks of and knows the certainties that God will carry out in God's own power as certainties. God determines the future to the extent God chooses. Therefore, the future is partly composed of certainties.
E - Emotion
God is Love. God is affected by the choices of free agents. God responds to free agents. God changes God's mind and plans in response to free agents. God is the most moved mover. It is God's desire to extend the intense love that God has always shared in the Trinity to the creatures God created forever. Christ is the perfect revelation of who God is, even in his emotions
Open theism is heresy and not tolerated on the BB. It is not orthodox Christianity.
If one believes such, they should walk away from this forum for good.
Orthodox Baptists do not believe in organizations that dictate beliefs, i.e those that govern should not dictate beliefs.
Exhaustive determinism, where God predestines everything, is not an orthodox Christian belief.
Thus Closed Theism is unorthodox,
and claiming God punishes us for the sins He predestined is unorthodox.
To say God does not respond to our prayers because the future is fixed is unorthodox.
We must be careful not to throw the baby out with the bath water.
The watershed issue is whether God is ever affected by and responds to what we do. All 'isms' that allow for free will are on one side and all 'isms' that deny free will are on the other.You seem confused, I can only assume you are using the term 'closed theism' in opposition to open theism. Yet you seem to have norrowed down the everything opposed to open theism to one view, which is incorrect as every Christain viewposint (which covers a wide spectrum) is opposed to open theism.
So, before creation, God decrees that each sin happen but didn't predestin it? What does it mean for God to decree? Is His decree is as certain as the doing of it? Nothing can be done that wasn't first decreed by God, correct?Here you show you do not understand the view you argeu against, God does not predestine sin, but it is part of he sovereign decree - did he decree that Jesus would die to save us or not? Was the murder of Jesus a sin?
If God determines everything prior to creation then does He really think that any created beings are authentically admiring Him and genuinely praising and extolling His greatness?Well that is a nonsense statement if ever I heard one! If God has dertermined the end from the beginning (Isa 46:10) it also means he must have determined the emans of arriving at that end as well, and if that means is prayer then the prayer is also determined
I agree with this. If only calvinists would obey your words here. The fundamentalist ethos is really thick among certain calvinist circles.We must also be careful to accurately represent views we reject
I believe this statement is wrong concerning Baptists.Orthodox Baptists do not believe in organizations that dictate beliefs, i.e those that govern should not dictate beliefs.
I believe this statement is wrong concerning Baptists.
Why be a Baptist if one does not adhere to a certain basic set of beliefs.
Every church I have ever been a member of, I have been asked to read at least a statement of faith, if not an entire constitution, and been asked if I agree with. If I don't agree with it, I should look elsewhere for a church I do agree with. How can two walk together unless they agree.
I am not a Calvinist, and neither is our church. Not too long ago a young man who became convinced of the reformed position did the right thing and resigned from the church because "his soteriology was different than what we taught." Since that time he has taken the logical steps of where reformed doctrine leads a person, and is now attending a Presbyterian Church.
Perhaps there is a middle ground you are searching for. Clarke Pinnock turned to Open Theism is his latter days. Here is how it is described:Exhaustive determinism is false doctrine. God would not predestine our sins then punish us for those sins. All Calvinism offers seems like shuck jive to address their foundation upon a logical impossibility.
Closed Theism claims the future is fixed, i.e. exhaustive determinism. If the future is not fixed and mankind can alter the outcome of their lives by choosing life over death, then Closed Theism is false doctrine.
http://www.knoxpcea.org.au/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=78&Itemid=122On 4 September 2002 I attended a lecture at Whitley Baptist College, Melbourne at which Dr Clark Pinnock, recently retired professor at McMaster University, USA, was the lecturer. Perhaps happily the attendance was only about 30.
His subject was open theism, the view that God gives up some power to his creatures so that they can have room to be. Pinnock is one of several major figures in the openness of God debate. It is a major issue in the USA at present, and will undoubtedly have influence here too. The Australian Presbyterian ran several good articles on the subject in their August 2002 issue.
Openness theology was presented by Pinnock as classic Arminianism 'with a twist'. Arminianism, named after Jacob Arminius (1560-1609), is that view which believes God's sovereignty is limited by the choice of the creature. God does what he can, but ultimately he must bow before the free will of the creature.
Do you really believe God gives up his power to his creatures?
You can do more research on open theism."God does what he can, but ultimately he must bow before the free will of the creature."
Do you really believe the last line you quoted was an accurate description and not a straw man?
If He doesn't give men power to freely choose then with what power do men choose?
"God knows everything current but not all of the future" says Pinnock, and Open Theism. I would count that as heresy, as it goes directly contrary to the omniscience of God. Thus it is no straw man or inaccuracy to say that open theism takes away from the power of God, or rather that God relinquishes some of his power. That has gone to an extreme.Pinnock argued that 85% of what he believes is not controversial to non-determinist Christians, but the new twist is in the 15%. The new twist is the belief that God knows everything current but not all of the future. The future is partly settled and partly not settled since it depends on the entirely free and undetermined acts of his creatures. God cannot know these, otherwise they would not be free acts. He argued that the strategy to further this view should not be to insist that it alone is correct, but to advocate it as an option that should be considered. Hopefully this would ultimately bring over the Arminian evangelicals, who have mostly not accepted openness teaching yet.
The watershed issue is whether God is ever affected by and responds to what we do. All 'isms' that allow for free will are on one side and all 'isms' that deny free will are on the other.
Van said:Orthodox Baptists do not believe in organizations that dictate beliefs, i.e those that govern should not dictate beliefs. Exhaustive determinism, where God predestines everything, is not an orthodox Christian belief.
So, before creation, God decrees that each sin happen but didn't predestin it?
What does it mean for God to decree? Is His decree is as certain as the doing of it? Nothing can be done that wasn't first decreed by God, correct?
Decree: an authoritative order having the force of law.
Okay, so God creates the creature and orders that he sin, correct?
If God determines everything prior to creation then does He really think that any created beings are authentically admiring Him and genuinely praising and extolling His greatness?
I agree with this. If only calvinists would obey your words here. The fundamentalist ethos is really thick among certain calvinist circles.
"A man's 'free'-will cannot cure him even of the tooth ache, or of a sore finger; and yet he madly thinks it is in its power to cure his soul." -Augustus Toplady
Here you show you do not understand the view you argeu against....
We must also be careful to accurately represent views we reject
Agreed. :wavey::thumbsup:
"God does what he can, but ultimately he must bow before the free will of the creature."
Do you really believe the last line you quoted was an accurate description and not a straw man?
If He doesn't give men power to freely choose then with what power do men choose?
I am not a Calvinist. I believe that God answers prayer and that there is a reason to pray.
And yet I still believe in the sovereignty of God, that God is still in control, that salvation is all of Him.
I wasn't attacking Calvinism. If anything I was clarifying my position in opposition to Open Theism and in relation to Van's. Though I also am not a Calvinist, I do recognize that Calvinists pray and believe that God answers prayer. Have I said otherwise?There you go again DHK. You assert absolutely false things to Calvinists. Of course we believe in prayer. It's not unCalvinistic of us to beleve that the Lord has enjoined us to do so and from His own examples.
God has everything to do with my salvation. I can assert with all confidence and authority that salvation is all of God. However, when I state that you will disagree with me simply because under the umbrella of God's sovereignty I believe that God has given man a measure of free will. Even though he knows (by his omniscience) what man's choice will be, it is man that still has to make the choice whether or not to receive or reject Christ.You may be heading in a more orthodox position with that statement but I would like to see it fleshed-out. And I wonder if you would still agree with your assertions of the past where you said things like God had nothing to do with you being saved etc.
God has everything to do with my salvation. I can assert with all confidence and authority that salvation is all of God.