A problem with open theism (HOF thread)

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drbrumley

Well-known member
Jeremiah85 said:
I must disagree. I firmly believe that God knows everything. For Him to know any less would make Him imperfect and vulnerable to mistakes.

Ok, then admit you get this from your own understanding and not what the Bible teaches.
 

Agape4Robin

Member
drbrumley said:
Then He never really suffered then either by this logic.
Doc-
Please refer to post #174.......

Knight came up with this "logic"....not me, and yet I try to make sense out of nonsense! :bang:
 

Freak

New member
In light of numerous Scriptures I stated:

If God were to "change his mind" about anything, this would mean by default that he failed to have complete knowledge (omniscience). Correct? You may ask Freak- why is this? Well, if a "change" became necessary for God, this would be a shortcoming or lack of complete knowledge.

My friend, any change in a perfect God-including a "changed mind"-would mean God changed to something less than perfect since perfection implies completeness, lacking no thing. Change for a perfect Being must be a change for the worst since a perfect God could not change for the better. A "changing perfect God" is, therefore, a contradiction and fails to describe an all-powerful, all-knowing, everywhere-present God. Think about it.

Knight, keep in mind that a perfect Being can't lack anything that is characteristic of his nature or he fails to be perfect. Now, how does this relate to whether or not God can change his mind? Well, if God could change his mind, this would mean that his "conclusion" or "knowledge" prior to the change was incorrect. He would, therefore, not be the perfect Being that he must be by nature. Any change in God would be a violation of his attributes.

This is fairly simple, a changing God implies a incompleteness. A change for a perfect being (God) must be a change for the worst since a perfect God could not change for the better-for He is perfect.

Our God is a LIVING PERRFECT GOD!
Knight said:
Freak, this is faulty pagan Greek philosophy which only applies to inanimate objects.

What part is "faulty?" The part that God is perfect!? A perfect God could not change for the better-for He is perfect.

God is not an inanimate object.[/QUOTe}

Huh? God is a PERFECT LIVING GOD!! A God we worship in spirit and truth!!!

Animated objects or living beings change by definition, it is the very thing that differentiates them from dead or inanimate objects.
The living Being-Holy God is PERFECT.

Change for a perfect Being must be a change for the worst since a perfect God could not change for the better. A "changing perfect God" is, therefore, a contradiction and fails to describe an all-powerful, all-knowing, everywhere-present God. Think about it.

A perfectly sized bowling ball cannot change and remain a perfectly sized bowling ball. Yet a perfect bowler changes all the time!
We are NOT speaking of a bowler but a PERFECT LIVING GOD!

Knight, as I pointed out earlier... a perfect Being can't lack anything that is characteristic of his nature or he fails to be perfect. Now, how does this relate to whether or not God can change his mind? Well, if God could change his mind, this would mean that his "conclusion" or "knowledge" prior to the change was incorrect. He would, therefore, not be the perfect Being that he must be by nature. Any change in God would be a violation of his attributes.
 

Agape4Robin

Member
Freak said:
In light of numerous Scriptures I stated:

If God were to "change his mind" about anything, this would mean by default that he failed to have complete knowledge (omniscience). Correct? You may ask Freak- why is this? Well, if a "change" became necessary for God, this would be a shortcoming or lack of complete knowledge.

My friend, any change in a perfect God-including a "changed mind"-would mean God changed to something less than perfect since perfection implies completeness, lacking no thing. Change for a perfect Being must be a change for the worst since a perfect God could not change for the better. A "changing perfect God" is, therefore, a contradiction and fails to describe an all-powerful, all-knowing, everywhere-present God. Think about it.

Knight, keep in mind that a perfect Being can't lack anything that is characteristic of his nature or he fails to be perfect. Now, how does this relate to whether or not God can change his mind? Well, if God could change his mind, this would mean that his "conclusion" or "knowledge" prior to the change was incorrect. He would, therefore, not be the perfect Being that he must be by nature. Any change in God would be a violation of his attributes.

This is fairly simple, a changing God implies a incompleteness. A change for a perfect being (God) must be a change for the worst since a perfect God could not change for the better-for He is perfect.

Our God is a LIVING PERRFECT GOD!

What part is "faulty?" The part that God is perfect!? A perfect God could not change for the better-for He is perfect.

God is not an inanimate object.[/QUOTe}

Huh? God is a PERFECT LIVING GOD!! A God we worship in spirit and truth!!!

The living Being-Holy God is PERFECT.

Change for a perfect Being must be a change for the worst since a perfect God could not change for the better. A "changing perfect God" is, therefore, a contradiction and fails to describe an all-powerful, all-knowing, everywhere-present God. Think about it.

We are NOT speaking of a bowler but a PERFECT LIVING GOD!

Knight, as I pointed out earlier... a perfect Being can't lack anything that is characteristic of his nature or he fails to be perfect. Now, how does this relate to whether or not God can change his mind? Well, if God could change his mind, this would mean that his "conclusion" or "knowledge" prior to the change was incorrect. He would, therefore, not be the perfect Being that he must be by nature. Any change in God would be a violation of his attributes.
Freak, not once have they even refuted scripture except to say that it wasn't true or what the scripture was saying in effect.

How sad that they would choose the doctrines of men over the doctrine of God.
 

Jeremiah85

New member
drbrumley said:
Ok, then admit you get this from your own understanding and not what the Bible teaches.
I have yet to see the Bible brought up in this discussion. The Bible teaches that God is perfect. Logic dictates that if God can make mistakes because he does not know everything that will happen, then God is not perfect. That is a dangerous position for a Christian to take. And btw, I would appreciate you not putting words in my mouth. I never claimed that I was getting this from the Bible. This is is simple logic.
 

Agape4Robin

Member
Jeremiah85 said:
I have yet to see the Bible brought up in this discussion. The Bible teaches that God is perfect. Logic dictates that if God can make mistakes because he does not know everything that will happen, then God is not perfect. That is a dangerous position for a Christian to take. And btw, I would appreciate you not putting words in my mouth. I never claimed that I was getting this from the Bible. This is is simple logic.
Yeah! What Jerry said! :BRAVO:
 

Poly

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Knight said:
Man I love open theism! It rocks! It cannot be defeated and it has no holes! Praise the Lord!!!

Threads like this get me so pumped!

It's just too easy.

But isn't that how the truth should be?

Gotta go, be back later!

Wow, this thread has grown!

Knight, looks like God predestined you to kick butt and take names on this thread. :up:

I see some people got spanked like a kid at Wally World!!
 

Agape4Robin

Member
Poly said:
Wow, this thread has grown!

Knight, looks like God predestined you to kick butt and take names on this thread. :up:

I see some people got spanked like a kid at Wally World!!
:yawn: :nono:
 

Clete

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Freak said:
I am content in knowing that God gives us free will & that He knows all.
That is not an answer. Do you or don't you accept the existence of antinomy within the Christian faith? Most Christians do so this isn't some sort of trap, I'm just asking.

There are many theological elements that remain mysterious. Understanding the deeper truths of the triune nature of God, for example, is mysterious. I've yet to meet anyone who fully understands the nature of God. Free will and absolute knowledge of God seems equally necessary and reasonable.
I'm not talking about things that we don't fully understand like the Trinity or how God could have existed for an eternity into the past. I'm talking about opennly contradictory things which the theological community, Reformed theologians in particular, call antinomy.

an•tin•o•my
n. pl. an•tin•o•mies
1. Contradiction or opposition, especially between two laws or rules.
2. A contradiction between principles or conclusions that seem equally necessary and reasonable; a paradox.​

What many OVer's fail to see is that Jesus who is God was able to look into the future and knew exactly what was to pass. Did Jesus really only make a prediction about Peter denying him based upon Peter's character? But the prophecy was so specific: three denials before the rooster crowed twice (Mark 14:30-72). When Ezekiel prophesied about the destruction of the city of Tyre, was that just a really good guess? It was too accurate a prophecy for that.
It was a lot more than a good guess but it was nevertheless still a prediction; a prediction which God Himself could easily have helped to bring to pass (and probably did). God (Jesus) knew Peter better than Peter knew himself and so knew that he would not have the courage to face was about to happen. All that God would have needed to do was to bring Peter to someone's mind who had seen him before (which would not be difficult for God to do) and then once Peter had denied him a third time (he probably would have done it a fourth and a fifth and a sixth time, I think Jesus was being merciful by have said three), all God had to do was to tickle the throat of the nearest rooster. For God, all of this would have been really, really easy, no steeling a sneak peak into the future was necessary.
Further Peter could have chosen not to deny Christ. Had he done so, Jesus would have been astonished at Peter's faith the way He had been towards the centurion's or the Samaritan woman's faith. Peter would not have ruined God's reputation or fouled up the Bible for having done the right thing that night. The only difference would have been there would have been yet another passage in the Bible that Calvinist would be forced to call a figure of speech.

Intellectually dishonest. :down:
It was not intellectually dishonest. It may have been overly brief but I was at work at the time. Give me at least a little bit of a break here will ya? You know as well as anyone here that I do not play idiotic games like that.
I quite sincerely do not believe that there is any Biblical evidence that God knows the future exhaustively. There certainly isn't any passage that says "God knows the future exhaustively.", nor is there one that says anything like that. There are certainly plenty of passages that speak about God's ability to predict the future and that He has the ability to bring particular things to pass but that doesn't even come close to saying that God knows every event that will ever happen, it just doesn't say that. This coupled with the several instances where God makes a specific prophecy that never did and never will come to pass as stated is proof positive that God does not know the future exhaustively.
Further, as the last hundred or so posts on this thread clearly demonstrate, attempting to reconcile God exhaustively knowing the future with the concept of a free will almost immediately lands you in logical quagmire that cannot be escaped. The whole Christian faith becomes an incoherent mass of meaningless or self-contradictory nonsense.
God cannot know the future because the future is not knowable. The best that can be done is very accurate predictions but that is not the same as knowing for certain. Saying that God cannot know that which cannot be known does no injury to His "perfection" (in quotes because Plato's idea of perfection was stupid) or to His deity. Knowing the unknowable is a logically absurdity. God cannot do the logically absurd no matter how perfect He is. His not knowing the unknowable future does not more harm to His perfection than the fact that God cannot make perfect spheres with 17 sharp corners and 3 rippled sides.

Resting in Him,
Clete
 

Poly

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Agape4Robin said:
:yawn: :nono:

I'm thinkin' all this defeat has you worn out. You might need to think about getting some sleep.
 

Poly

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Freak said:
I think we all see that. I was amusing over the language you used.

Nah!

You don't say!
 
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