The people I heard say that God changes his mind, did not clarify such. It was clear from their statements and context that they meant God changes his mind in an absolute sense. There was no clarification in their statements. No discussions of anthropomorphisms, etc. They took, for instance, the narratives in Jonah and Abraham (re: Sodom & Gom.) in an absolute way, ingnoring other passages that clearly state God does not change. There was no nuance in their statements. For all intents and purposes, that is Open Theism, whether they are aware of the term or not. And of course, there are those who flat-out deny God's perfect omniscience, as in the previous context and in other scenarios.For the record, I am opposed to Open Theism—it is heresy. However, does God ever change His mind? What about when God changes or reverses his decrees? How do you know these members in the pew are saying the same thing as the Open Theism theologians? Laymen tend to state theology loosely and theologians tend to hear them narrowly. I can see how God does appear to change His mind when He reverses a decree. Please explain precisely. Thank you.
I've never said that the SBC is rampant with such thinking. It is definitely in the minority, at this point. However, I think it is foolish to think that Open Theism is not or will not be a problem in the SBC.