Lon
Well-known member
I'm likely in the wrong thread anyway. This is supposed to be a 'how' thread, I just couldn't help but weigh in that some 'how's' aren't quite connecting.It isn't literal in the sense that you swap out one mind for a different mind but that stupidity isn't even worth the time it takes to say it. To change your mind simply means to alter your way of thinking, your intention, your goal. If you think "A" and now think "not A", you've changed your mind. This is as true of God and anyone else.
Your mind and your brain have next to nothing to do with one another in this context. Your brain is where YOU interfaces with your physical body. Beyond that, the protein between your ears is irrelevant.
(The physical brain can and does effect the function of the mind, but that really is genuinely an entirely different topic.)
Which is always my argument as well. You'd probably intimate that I can change 'me' but I'm wondering why this is a point to connect with a classical theist, or argue a point with them. What we are talking about, ultimately, is whether God can be surprised or whether 'to sigh' means He changed His mind (again, it is a nonstarter out of the gate for me, because it is so problematic for conveying anything with clarity). Point: If you are talking amongst yourselves how to address other theists, it might be a problem on the table. It is for me, not just because I believe God isn't caught surprised, knows exactly what He is doing, but also because I believe 'changed one's mind' a modern and problematic colloquialism that just makes theology discussion so much more complicated and problematic, especially if one is trying to make a cogent point.Ridiculous.
Your mind isn't your alter ego, it is your ego! Your mind is you!
Thus my entrance into thread, is simply to say so. If no points, well, the thread can move along. I'm just saying it is a stop-conversation for quite a few of us who aren't Open Theists (called classical theists by Open Theism).
It can have good points but I also try to get the heart of a discussion, which isn't always the straightforward. I do believe, "Changed one's mind" is the starting place, because one either has to backtrack, or get lost down the trail a ways.Lon, you over think things more than any one else I know of.
This will be the problem because I analyze what one is trying to 'intimate' by the sloppy, if you will. I simply think 'changing one's mind' is a sloppy colloquialism, and further, that most people don't actually know what they really mean when they say it. There are quite a few much better ways to describe what is going on in scripture, like simply taking it at face value "to sigh." The further we get away from exact meaning, the further we start interpreting, where we can get it wrong. We aren't going to agree on everything. We'd have to have the exact same minds for that to happen. When we come to a divergence, we discuss, often debate, over the difference. I believe it good. Even if I walk away fully believing as I always have, I've a rounder/fuller appreciation over the subject matter.How is it not completely intuitive that people aren't talking about swapping out one mind for an entirely different mind. It isn't the mind itself that changes, but it's content. I mean, how is it that you cannot remember having ever changed your own mind and thereby know intuitively what it being talked about? How many millions of times have you changed your own mind through the course of your life? Is there nothing you believed in your childhood that you haven't discovered was false? Have you not ever gone to the grocery store intending to buy Tostitos and walked out with Cheetos instead?
Okay, for thread's sake (obviously we strongly disagree), what is the instruction (per thread) on how to answer a 'classic' theist? For me, unconvinced for both reasons stated: Attah "to sigh" and 'changed one's mind' not a very good alternative for 'to sigh.' So bringing it back to the thread, how is the classic theist addressed/answered?As always, words have a range of meaning. The particular meaning is determined by the context in which it is used. There are many times throughout the bible where it definitely means that God changed His mind.
It seems to me, it is a problem wholly created by English translation. "Attah" to sigh, seems very straightforward to me. I'd not even have met an Open Theist ( I don't think) without a problem of English conveyance on point. We cannot get 'changed his mind' from Attah if we were doing a word for word translation instead of a paraphrase/transliteration. I'm saying the problem is 'created' by transliteration against translation.No! Absolutely not! These passages are not interpreted after the fact as you are here implying. There is no Open Theist anywhere who decided that the future was open and then set about figuring out how to make certain passages say that God changes His mind. Indeed, it was quite the opposite.
Can't. There is literally no "Άλλαξε γνώμη" (Greek) nor "שינה את דעתו" (Hebrew 'changed His mind') in the Bible. Rather is 'Attah' over and against the cited 'need' for exact language, in either language to say precisely "God changed His mind." In a word, the 'best' you can do is paraphrase it! Literally.There are several passages that plainly teach that God has changed His mind.
See, you said something, but it wasn't correct thus must be built off of paraphrase. Has to be.This is a plain fact and stands as evidence that the future is open. In other words, the fact that God changes His mind is a premise of Open Theism, not a conclusion. In fact, the idea that God changes His mind is not even a necessary condition of Open Theism.