precedent which has not been overthrown by heterodox open theism
Answered in posts #210, #211, #216, #230, and #235.
Calling your view “precedent” and calling Open Theism “heterodox” does not prove anything. That is still appeal to tradition.
open theism infers not only does God not know the knowable he is not omnipresent
Answered in posts #216, #229, #230, #232, and #235.
Open Theism says God knows all that is knowable. The disagreement is over whether future free choices already exist as settled facts to be known before they are made.
I know until open theism came along everyone got it wrong.
Answered in posts #210, #211, #216, #230, and #235.
Again, appeal to tradition.
“Open Theism” is the modern label, not the invention of the idea that God is free, that men make real choices, and that the future is not exhaustively settled before those choices are made. You are confusing the age of a term with the age of the doctrine, and even if the label were recent, that still would not prove the position false. The question is what Scripture teaches, not which theological nickname is oldest.
but to your point you mean what the bible teaches ,
(Romans 8:29) For whom he foreknew, he also foreordained to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brethren
Romans 8:29 says “whom He foreknew,” not “every future free choice He exhaustively foreknew.”
Paul is talking about the group God foreknew and predestined in Christ: those who are in Him will be conformed to the image of His Son. The passage does not say God exhaustively foreknew every future free act of every individual before creation, nor does it say Abraham’s obedience in Genesis 22 was already known before the test.
So if this is supposed to prove exhaustive infallible foreknowledge of every future free choice, you still need to supply the missing argument, because “God foreknew the destiny of those in Christ” is not the same thing as “God exhaustively foreknew every future choice of every person.”
(Jeremiah 1:5) Before I formed thee in the belly I knew thee, and before thou camest forth out of the womb I sanctified thee; I have appointed thee a prophet unto the nations
Jeremiah 1:5 says God knew Jeremiah, sanctified him, and appointed him as a prophet before he was born.
Amen.
But “before birth” is not the same thing as “before conception,” much less “before creation.” Once Jeremiah existed in the womb, God could know him, form him, appoint him, and plan around his life. None of that requires God to have exhaustively foreknown every future free choice Jeremiah would ever make, much less every future free choice of every person who would ever live.
God knowing and appointing Jeremiah for a prophetic role before birth is not the same thing as exhaustive infallible foreknowledge of all future contingencies.
do open theist have a book of Daniel or do you just tear that one out ?
Name the passage and make the argument.
Open Theists affirm prophecy. God can declare what He intends to do, what He will bring about by His own power, what will happen if men continue in rebellion, and what He knows from present conditions and His own plans.
What you need to prove is not “the Bible contains prophecy.” Everyone here already believes that.
What you need to prove is that prophecy requires exhaustive infallible foreknowledge of every future free choice. So cite the Daniel passage you have in mind and show how it proves that.
it's irrational to say God knows all that is knowable then deny it
Answered in posts #207, #211, #216, #227, #230, #232, and #235.
You keep repeating the same confusion. Open Theism does not deny that God knows all that is knowable. It denies that future free choices are already settled facts before they are made.
God knew sodom was evil but didn't know sodom was evil , ah the special pleading
Answered in posts #211, #216, #229, #232, and #235.
Genesis 13:13 says Sodom was wicked generally. Genesis 18:21 concerns a specific outcry that God says He will investigate: “I will go down now and see... and if not, I will know.” Genesis 19:13 occurs after that investigation.
Also, notice the phrase, “the outcry against it that has come to Me.”
That is not how the passage would naturally read if God were timelessly outside the sequence, already beholding every fact as eternally settled. The outcry “came” to Him, and in response He says He will go down and see whether they have done according to that outcry, “and if not, I will know.”
That is how normal language works because the text is describing real sequence: outcry comes to God, God responds, God investigates, God judges. Your view has to flatten all of that into “God already knew,” but the passage itself does not speak that way.
You are still flattening different claims into one and then accusing me of special pleading for reading the sequence in order.
'if you ignore all the verses that infer\teach omniscience then there are no verses that infer\teach omniscience '
Neo in the matrix
uh no that was about a spoon ¯(ツ)/¯
Answered in posts #207, #211, #216, #227, #230, #232, and #235.
This is question-begging.
You are treating “the Bible teaches omniscience” as though it automatically means “the Bible teaches my definition of omniscience,” and then accusing me of ignoring verses about God’s knowledge because I reject your definition.
That is not an argument.
I affirm that God knows all that is knowable. The dispute is whether future free choices are already settled facts before they are made. Quoting verses that teach God’s knowledge does not prove that future contingencies already exist as settled facts, nor does it prove exhaustive infallible foreknowledge of every future free choice.
but those verses were about omnipresence , as in God didn't need to go to sodom to know if it was evil
Answered in posts #216, #229, #232, and #235.
Even if you want to use Jeremiah 23 and Psalm 139 as omnipresence texts (and for the record, they are not), they still do not make Genesis 18:21 say the opposite of what it says. Your theology needs “I will know” to mean “I already knew.” The text says, “I will know.”
Answered in posts #207, #211, #216, #227, #230, and #235.
Revelation 4:1 says God would show John what “must occur.” That proves prophecy. It does not prove exhaustive infallible foreknowledge of every future free choice.
“Must occur” can mean these things must occur because God will bring His prophetic program to completion. It does not mean every contingent detail is eternally fixed as prewritten history.
Revelation gives the prophetic outline of what God will bring about. It is not a philosophical treatise proving exhaustive infallible foreknowledge of every future free choice.