Open Theism:
Making
God in the Image of Man
My friend Matt
is the kind of guy we would all love to have in our church.
He is one of those clean-cut, all-American, good-hearted young
men. an answer to the anonymous poem, "The Boy We Want." He is a loyal, encouraging, faithful servant
that makes the ministry a joy.
That is what
made it so surprising the Sunday he interrupted his pastor mid-sermon
nearly shouting from the front pew, "You are wrong!"
What would
lead a young man to blurt out such a declaration and disrupt a
church worship service? It certainly was not characteristic
of his life and he quickly apologized and sought the forgiveness
of the church and his pastor for the disturbance. But I
am not so sure his comments were out of line.
Matt had been
hearing in his pastor a growing tendency to demean the omniscience
and sovereignty of God. It had been a growing cloud on the
horizon that the two of them had spoken about frankly and privately
for several months. But on the Sunday of Matt's interjection,
his pastor had finally come out and said, "God is not in control."
Matt's pastor
is only one of a growing number of men embracing a new theism
called Openness. The end result of this construct is a redefinition
of God's knowledge and, some would argue, a redefinition of God
Himself. Its effects on practical theology are enormous
and its effects on how one reads their bible even greater.
It is true that lots of systems of thought come and go, but for
reasons that will be expanded below, this is a system that deserves
our study.
The goal of
this essay is to 1. Accurately represent the Open Theism
(OT throughout the rest of this paper) position in terms easily
understood. 2. To assess it. 3. To point
out its benefits and/or dangers.
Part
I: What is Open Theism and Why all the Fuss?
What
is Open Theism
OT is a new
theological system developed systematically over the last twenty
years. Because it is "new," it has morphed along the way
adding and dropping various monikers such as Relational Theism,
Freewill Theism, Simple Foreknowledge, Presentism, Openness and
some versions of Middle Knowledge. Sometimes, "Openness" alone is used
as a catchword to describe this entire "theological family," allowing
each sibling to maintain its own distinctives.
The main proponents
of this view have been Clark Pinnock, professor of theology at
McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario; Gregory Boyd, pastor
of Woodland Hills Church in Minneapolis, Minnesota and a professor
at Bethel College in the same city; and John Sanders, professor
of philosophy and religion at Huntington College, Indiana.
Other prominent personalities that embrace the view include William
Hasker, David Basinger, Richard Rice, Lewis Smedes and Philip
Yancey.
As will be
seen, OT is primarily a way of understanding God.
It is an outright rejection of Classical Theism (CT throughout
the rest of this paper) and claims to be a more accurate interpretation
of what the Bible has to say regarding the nature of the Trinity
and how the Trinity engages creation. It is not so much
a redefinition of particular theological compartments as it is a complete remodelling of theology proper.
As may be expected, however, a reconstruction of God has incredible
corollary effects on these particular sub-doctrines.
Why
Another Study?
OT switched the
Playing Field
Gregory Boyd,
in his best-selling work God of the Possible, states as
the second goal of his book:
".I
also believe this issue is too important and too practically significant
to be limited to academic circles. I believe there is currently
a need to present this issue in a manner that can include as many
laypeople as possible. This book attempts to do just that."
In this pronouncement,
Boyd has exposed the agenda of OT. Discontent with their
negative reception from most evangelical theological institutions, Open Theists have abandoned the realm of scholarly
debate and councils and are making their case with the church
as a whole. Rather than hammering out the position and allowing
for a decision in the ring of "academic circles," Open Theists
have decided to put the brunt of their energies into getting the
teachings of OT to the general populace in its simplest and most
appealing forms.
This is dangerous
precedent. Worse yet, it means that you and I who pastor
local churches must be conversant in the teachings of OT in order
to properly shepherd the flock under our care. Open Theists
are not waiting for you to invite them in to make a presentation
of their views. They are, instead, actively presenting their
thoughts in a myriad of popular forms all aimed at the men and
women in your pews.
Whether you
like it or not you are being forced to look at the issues and
deal with them in a sane, balanced and, most importantly, biblically
accurate way. As former academic resource consultant to
Baker Books David Frees comments about Boyd's work: ".although
scholars will notice quite a few logical fallacies and pick up
on. poor exegesis of Old Testament passages, the average Christian
will not."
We must not
be bamboozled into thinking this will all go away.
OT claims orthodoxy
The proponents
of OT continually encourage the idea that their view is merely
another system within the realm of orthodoxy. In other words, disagreement with them
is acceptable, (like a Calvinist would disagree with an Arminian,) while excommunication is not. It seems
to me that we have to come to some conclusion on this matter.
Our post-modern hesitancy to say anything is wrong may
lead us to accept as orthodox what is unorthodox. On the
other hand, our strong fundamentalist history may lead us to condemn
brothers in the Lord. Where are we to land? Is this
even a debate about orthodoxy? We must come to some conclusions
on this matter.
Where OT takes
us
A third reason
we need to study this issue is because of its obvious ramifications.
An Open Theist
and a Classic Theist do not think about God Himself the same way.
Indeed, some would venture to say they are not even thinking about
the same God! That is because conclusions on the
nature of God's knowledge lead you to conclusions on the nature
of God Himself. What God knows (or chooses to know) cannot
be bifurcated from His entire person. What is more, we cannot
ignore the fact that altering our view of God alters our view
of reality.
What did you
say?
There is a
certain battle of ideas taking place in this discussion.
Open Theists freely use terms like foreknowledge, sovereignty
and omniscience, but they have redefined those terms to
fit within the construct of the Open View. At worst, this
is deceptive. At best, it is confusing. In reality,
it is another reason why we need to study the issue and understand
what Open Theists mean by what they say.
"What it means
to me"
Finally, it
is necessary to study OT because of the constant claim that it
is a biblical position. Unlike some earlier critiques,
OT cannot be brushed away with the declaration that it is "just
a philosophical system" that does not even reference the Bible.
Boyd had the courage to subtitle his work "A Biblical Introduction
to the Open View of God" (emphasis mine). Sanders consumes
rainforests "biblically defending" the Open View. The same can be said for the other major contributors
to the position. This requires us to look at their conclusions
and determine if such is true.
Bluntly, the
assumption of this author is that if the Open View of God is biblical,
then it ought to be fully embraced. This is perhaps the
most serious reason we need to examine it. Whatever reason
we deem most important, the end result is the same - we need to
appraise OT.
Part II: A Comprehensive
Explanation of OT
Defining OT
is not easy. Granting that any new idea undergoes certain
refinements, it cannot be denied that OT seems to be always changing. Therefore, detailing a specific working model
of the system is almost sure to fail. it is outdated, it seems,
the moment you print the paper. That being said, this paper
will seek to interact with the most recent literature to date
and draw from a personal interview with Clark Pinnock, a significant
spokesperson for the view.
The basic argument
for OT unfolds something like this.
"Because
God experiences time like we do and because the future does not
yet exist, God doesn't know what the future holds. Although
He is aware of the various possibilities of what could
happen, the free-will decisions of God's moral creatures are unknown
to Him until those decisions are made. In other words, the events
of tomorrow remain hidden from the mind of God until tomorrow
actually arrives.
As
a result, God is left to decide and to act in this world according
to what He thinks is most likely to occur. Because He is
sometimes mistaken about what He thought would happen, however,
God occasionally finds Himself regretting a decision and resorting
to Plan B. In this way, God learns from historical events
as they occur and actually changes His mind and His plans in response
to them. This, say Open Theists, allows God to have a genuine
and authentic relationship with mankind."
I read the
above statement to Clark Pinnock and asked if it was a fair assessment.
He responded that although what the statement said was not inaccurate,
he did feel it was unbalanced. As noted above, most Open
Theists believe that their view is not being looked at as a whole.
In fact, Pinnock suggested to me that it is a tactic of those
opposed to OT ("our enemies") to harp on the knowledge issues
as a way of distracting from the position without comprehensively
engaging it. His complaint with the above statement is that
it does not address the concept of God being in real relationship
with people and as such choosing to take risks for the sake of
love in those relationships.
Thus, John
Sanders defines OT giving more of this broader approach:
".
it presents an understanding of God's nature and relationship
with his creatures, which we call the openness of God; in broad
strokes, it takes the following form. God, in grace, grants humans
significant freedom to cooperate with or work against God's will
for their lives, and he enters into dynamic, give and take relationships
with us. The Christian life involves genuine interaction between
God and human beings. We respond to God's gracious initiatives
and God responds to our responses . . . and on it goes. God takes
risks in this give-and-take relationship, yet he is endlessly
resourceful and competent in working toward his ultimate goals.
Sometimes God alone decides how to accomplish these goals. On
other occasions, God works with human decisions, adapting his
own plans to fit the changing situation. God does not control
everything that happens. Rather, he is open to receiving input
from his creatures. In loving dialogue, God invites us to participate
with him to bring the future into being."
In this model,
the concept of risk comes to the forefront. Boyd agrees:
"The
view simply states that the future is partly open to possibilities,
and since God is omniscient and knows all of reality just like
it is, he knows the future as being partly open to possibilities."
Thus, God knows
some things about the future - things He is really set on accomplishing
- but He chooses to not know many things, in order to love
His people by entering into a real relationship with them. at
least a relationship that appears real since it is most like our
human ones.
This is OT
in a very small nutshell. Perhaps the easiest way to grasp
the position is to start at the beginning and work our way back
to the conclusion. Seeing how OT has evolved may shed greater
light on what it really is.
Love
It seems that
all Open Theists lift-off from the same launching pad to arrive
at their conclusions. That starting point is none other
than 1 John 4:8 (or similar texts), which state: "God is love."
This, it is claimed, is the "first and last word in the biblical
portrait of God." Love is "the one divine activity that most fully
and vividly discloses God's inner reality. [it] is the very essence
of the divine nature. Love is what it means to be God." Pinnock adds, "God created the world out of
love and with the goal of acquiring a people who would, like a
bride, freely participate in his love."
With love as
the supreme definition of God, OT then moves to discover how this
love fleshes itself out in the world. It is true, most Open
Theists are quick to decry any link to Process Theology, a charge
laid against them often in the early stages of the debate.
Process Theology suggests a cause and effect relationship between
God and the world: God needs the world and therefore needs relationship
with people. However, that being said, where Open Theists
go next sounds an awful lot like Process Theology, for the next
step in the puzzle has everything to do with relationship.
Relationship
The logic runs
something like this: 1. God is love. 2. Love requires
relationship. 3. Therefore, God is in relationship with
mankind. Much is said, at this point, about the relationship
that exists within the Trinity. This is proof that God in
His love needs (without being dependent upon) relationship.
Freedom
Moral freedom,
free-will or choice is the next step. This freedom, or Openness,
or Risk, as it is called gets at the heart of the system.
The opposite of love toward humankind would be to create automatons
- creatures with no real freedom and hence, no real relationship
with their Maker. God would never do this because it would
violate love.
To argue in
reverse, Open Theists teach that freedom is the meat of relationship
(if I don't choose to love you or return your love how
can it properly be called relationship?) and relationship (or
the availability of it) with our Creator is the essence of love
toward us.
This threefold
strand of Love, Relationship and Freedom is not easily broken,
since it forms the philosophical premise, or at least the propositional
presupposition of the entire OT model.
Other Influences
Braided into
this three-strand cord are two other major influences. OT
makes much out of what might be called a Trinitarian Theology,
that is, finding the explanation for reality within the Trinitarian
economy. Reasoning proceeds like this: Since God exists
as the "three-in-one," He exists in relationship. Since
He exists in relationship, He values relationship. And since
"He is love" (above all else), this love within the Trinity expresses
itself in relationship. The very fact God has chosen to
relate to His creation as "Father" is proof positive of His desire
for relationship.
There is also
heavy dependence on what may be termed an Incarnational Theology.
The incarnation, more than any other theme, serves as a model
for openness. The way the Son exhibits emotion, seems to change
His mind, chooses to act in history and is ignorant of the future
all help formulate a concept of God limiting Himself in certain
respects (or, "keeping Himself open to change") in order to exist
in real relationship with people.
Deconstruction
of CT: Philosophy and Hermeneutic
A final weapon
in the Open Theist's arsenal is the dismantling of classical theism's
view of God. This is attempted in two ways. The first
and primary one is to demonstrate that ancient Greek pagan philosophy
has more to do with CT than the Bible; the majority view of God
has listened more to the voice of Aristotle and Plato than Scripture.
The church fathers carried this fallacy forward and ensconced
it into the creeds and confessions. This has led the various
OT authors to re-examine the Word with a fresh slate and feel
free to question all they have been taught by historical theology.
The second
front in this battle is the hermeneutical one. In order
to properly understand God, theologians need to become more "nuanced." They especially need to deal more with the narrative
texts that supposedly teach the dynamic and social character of
God. These texts prove that God has feelings, that He has
intentions for humanity that sometimes do not work out and that
He acts in the world - all of which are signs of His openness.
What Do You Know?
It is from
this view of God that OT moves to a discussion of how God relates
to the world. Since God values real relationship and real
relationship must be uncoerced, He has voluntarily given mankind a free will - to
love or hate Him. As Pinnock writes, "It seems that God,
in deciding to create humankind, placed higher value on freedom
leading to love than on guaranteed conformity to his will."
Therefore,
in order for the will of man to remain free, God chooses to not
know the future, since to know it would be to have decreed it
and to have decreed it would be to rob man of his freedom.
So, the omniscience of God must be redefined. God knows,
not everything; only everything there is to know. Stephen Wellum confirms this:
Given
libertarian freedom, they insist, it is impossible for anyone,
including God himself, truly to know what people will do since
there are no antecedent sufficient conditions which decisively
incline a person's will in one direction over another. Thus,
in upholding a libertarian view of human freedom, open theism
denies that God can know the future free actions of human beings.
Since the future
free decisions of men have not taken place, it is logically inconceivable
that God would know what those decisions might be. He might
have a really good idea, based on His databank of facts of your
past life and your patterns of decision-making. He is also
a very good guesser, since He has been dealing with humankind
for so long.
".given
the depth and breadth of God's knowledge of the present situation,
God forecasts what he thinks will happen. In this regard
God is the consummate social scientist predicting what will happen.
God's ability to predict the future in this way is far more accurate
than any human forecaster's, however, since God has exhaustive
access to all past and present knowledge."
On the
other hand, since freedom means unpredictability, He might be
wrong about future free decisions. It is this potential to be incorrect that really
makes God open to men. Sometimes He needs to change a course
of action based on the unforeseen decisions of men. Other
times He has to attempt His goal through other means or other
people. This is not a threat to God (since He is God and
infinitely resourceful) and should, in fact, lead us to a greater
appreciation of His Person:
"The
bottom line is that life is all about possibilities. We
are thinking, feeling, willing, personal beings only because we,
like God, are beings who can reflect on and choose between possibilities."
In this model,
God remains "sovereign," even though He has chosen to allow for
genuine relationship by not "micro-managing creation." Still, in order to accomplish His purposes,
there are some things which God does decree and which He will
accomplish even though the "doing" might or will violate man's
free will. The cross is sometimes kept in this category and in some respects so is eschatology,although not much has been written on this topic.
The end result
then is that humanity enters into a partnership with God to create the future.
This future is as unknown to God as it is to us, except that when
God feels "things are just right" He will "close the curtain"
and usher in the age to come.
Part III:
Evaluating the System
To evaluate
OT in its entirety is well beyond the scope and setting of this
paper and that is frustrating. I will attempt to appraise
a few crucial points, but an entire book would need to be written
to adequately treat each section. This means that certain gaping holes will be
left and my only hope is that we can cover some of them together
in our discussion period.
Is Love the Divine
Essence?
By positing
love as the "very essence" of who and what God is, OT breaks with
most orthodox theologies that look at God in a complex or amalgamated
fashion. While no one is suggesting that love is inconsequential,
there is indeed a valid question to be asked of any system that
esteems one attribute of the Godhead over and (in a very real
sense) against the others.
For instance,
Peter wrote that God is "holy." How is this any less a description
of the divine essence than "love?" Why is love more important
than holiness? What in the text suggests that it is so?
The same book that declares this love of God also proclaims, "God
is light" (1 John 4:16; 1:5). Why isn't this the final word on His being?
Open Theists never answer these questions, but expect us to accept
their proposition at face value.
There is always
a danger of compartmentalizing God and thinking of Him only as
He appears in His various attributes. An overemphasis on the sovereignty of God has
led many good people to morbid and depressing lives. A focus
on the mercy of God has led others to antinomianism. One
wonders if Open Theists are somehow hanging on to the overemphasis
of the 1960's. the love of God?
When God's
love is cast in stone as His premier attribute, then all other
attributes and all the decisions that God makes must flow out
of love. Perhaps this is why there has been little or no
discussion of God's punishment and wrath by Open Theists, other
than to say that they cannot conceive of a God who would punish
for eternity. Yet, the orthodox tradition has been to examine
God's attributes individually as a means of gaining a crisper
definition to then inject into the overall picture of God.
Open Theists suggest that CT has been overrun by neo-platonic
thought, but isn't one of the deplorable hangovers of Plato the
creation of false dichotomies? OT has partitioned love from
the rest of God where there is no textual warrant and has fallen
into the trap they accuse others of squirming in.
As a result,
God becomes a victim of His own love. He is forced to give
mankind a level of freedom that can hurt Him (hence, "the God
who risks") and He cannot perfectly know the future since to know
it would be to decree it and to decree it would be to rob mankind
of all freedom. This would spell the end of love and the
end of God.
This is what
leads OT into the waters of God's knowledge. It is not just
that a few fringe theologians sat around one day and said, "What
can we write about to make ourselves really disliked?" No,
the OT redefinition of God's knowledge is a result of the love-relationship-freedom
paradigm.
Relationship
and Freedom
Secondly, it
must be asked, "Are absolute sovereignty and genuine relationship
mutually exclusive?" That is to say, does it logically follow
that the moment God removes human freedom He ceases to be able
to authentically engage me as a person?
OT argues that
absolute sovereignty destroys real relationship since real relationship
is predicated on free will. If I am not free to take on
the relationship or to reject it then I can have no relationship. The question is, how can a sovereign God really
relate to me as a person, if my personhood, by definition, requires
absolute freedom. How do human responsibility and divine
sovereignty co-exist? This is not a new question and has
been answered effectively elsewhere.
It is worth
noting here, however, that the very sin OT charges against CT,
that of opting out of difficult theological conclusions by resorting
to "tension," "paradox," "compatibilism" or "antinomy," is the
very sin they feel free to commit at will. With a wave of
the hand, the antinomy of Jim Packer's Evangelism and
the Sovereignty of God, and the compatibilism of Carson
and Piper are sent packing. However, the same kind of solution
is allowed with the tricky points of OT. Boyd requires antinomy
in his conclusion that God is altogether wise, even though
at times mistaken. Pinnock does the same thing, noting a "paradox"
between the strength and vulnerability of God. More will be said on this logical fallacy later
on, but the point to observe here is that both sides of the debate
use the same device.
The complaint
against OT is that it does not interact with the genuine solutions
offered by Calvinists to the real problem of understanding the
relationship between human responsibility and divine sovereignty.
Rather, OT rejects the Calvinistic solution to this problem on
the grounds that its acceptance is "logically untenable" and leads
to "a crisis of faith." Now, these are the kind of useless answers that
could be hurled right back at OT. They add nothing to the
advancement toward the Truth.
It would be
of far more interest to hear how OT thinkers would interact with
the biblical notion of "the liberty or contingency of second causes"
especially as it is taught in our Baptist confession.
"God
has decreed in himself, from all eternity, by the most wise and
holy counsel of his own will, freely and unchangeably, all things,
whatsoever comes to pass; yet so as thereby is God neither the
author of sin nor does he have fellowship with any therein; nor
is violence offered to the will of the creature, nor yet is the
liberty or contingency of second causes taken away, but rather
established; in which appears his wisdom in disposing all
things, and power and faithfulness in accomplishing his decree."
The phrase
"liberty of second causes" means that a man acts without "external
coercion" and never does what he does not will to do.
Yet, the Lord has predestined all he does. Thus, while God
is in no way responsible for the evil actions of a man, He has
at the same time decreed them. As Sam Waldron explains,
".it
is certainly true that God is not actively involved in bringing
about man's sin in the same way that he is involved in bringing
to pass righteousness and salvation. In this sense, we may
speak of divine permission of certain acts. On the other
hand, we may never speak of bare or unwilling or forced permission
with reference to God. God only permits in history what
he has already decreed before history should certainly come to
pass. nothing conditions God's decree."
The plain truth
of texts such as Genesis 50:20 are never dealt with adequately
by Open Theists, thus the plain truth of God's eternal decree
is never answered. What passages like this clearly teach
us is that God can exist in a relationship with humans
even though He has predetermined everything in that human's life,
including sin.
Trinitarian and
Incarnational Theologies
Reflecting
on the Triune nature of the Lord is always a profitable exercise
and it is true that much can be gleaned from the relational dynamics
within the Godhead. I would suggest though, that since fully
understanding the Trinity is not even possible, it is naïve
of OT to suggest that God wants to exist in a relationship with
man that is identical in kind and extent to that which
He has with Himself.
Such thinking
does not fully take into account the transcendence of the Almighty
and the simple fact that God is not a man - He is the Creator.
If God were a man, one assumes that the categories and parameters
of relationship would be the same between God-and-man as they
are between man-and-man. This is not, however, the biblical
teaching or picture. Although "made in His image," God relates
to men in key respects differently than He does to Himself, simply
because man is a created, finite being.
No one disagrees
with the fact that God desires to exist in a relationship of love
with His creation. What is denied is that our return love
to God can only be real or genuine if God remains eternally neutral
to the future. In fact, "we love because He first loved
us," said the Apostle whom Jesus loved. In this sense, our
love proceeds out of, or generates from the love with which God
loved us. This does not demean our love, but accomplishes
God's purposes and brings glory to His name.
OT's Incarnational
Theology serves as another crack in the foundation. Rice
and others have foolishly looked at the Incarnation as a comprehensive
explanation of God, not taking into account His pre-existence
or His Return. He goes as far as to say that. ".God revealed Himself
in Jesus as nowhere else. Jesus defines the reality of
God." What is more, he suggests that since God chose
humanity to make Himself known, therefore ".the distinctive features
of human experience [must be] most reminiscent of the divine reality."
The next stage
in this line of reasoning is to make the actions and experiences
of Jesus' earthly ministry normative for God. Thus, since
Jesus did not exercise coercive power over humans in the gospels,
the Godhead never does. This is the proof, you see, that God values
relationship and only woos and warns, never effectually calls
or punishes.
In other words,
Rice is claiming that God became man and not an apple because
man was most like Him. This is the cracked foundation of
OT. Although Open Theists would deny it, the fact is they
have exalted humanity to the position of a new and final hermeneutic. God can only be explained as He fits into my
human experience. I relate with people - therefore God relates
to people. My life is full of surprises - therefore God's
life is full of surprises. Granted that OT still treats
God as a different being than man, it cannot be denied that He
is much closer to the exalted man-God of Mormonism than the YHWH
of the Bible.
Bruce Ware
poignantly comments:
"And
what's wrong with this? Only that the incarnation marks
a historical time when Jesus, the eternal Son of God, veiled His
glory (see John 17:5) along with many privileges and prerogatives
of deity (see Phil 2:5-8) in order to take on the finitude, weaknesses,
and limitations of human servanthood. Incarnation marks,
in one sense, a limitation of full divine expression. while it
also expresses, in another sense, God's nature gloriously manifest
(John 1:14, 18). Therefore, theology proper dare not
be incarnational lest we conceive of God wrongly as being subject
to experiencing those aspects of human weakness and limitations
which Jesus underwent for the purpose of his mission."
The simple
fact that Jesus, in His Triumphant Return, will appear in all
His glory which He had with the Father before the creation of
the world (John 17:5; Philippians 2:9-11) is enough to show that
the Incarnation is an inappropriate sample for determining theology
proper.
Is CT Flawed?
History, Philosophy and Hermeneutic
One of the
primary arguments for the demise of CT is that its leans far more
on Greek philosophy than the God of the Bible. Is this true?
I am not an historical theologian - and neither (apparently) are
any of the OT authors. Therefore, I will not attempt to refute
their premise, especially since it has been done effectively in
other places. For instance, Alister McGrath comments:
"Why
should we trust clarion calls to modify the evangelical tradition
if the critics are not familiar with it? It is in John Sanders's
chapter on "Historical Considerations" that the problem
is made most evident. There he surveys how the "Greek metaphysical
system 'boxed up' the God described in the Bible." Yet the
survey Sanders presents is derivative, based on secondary literature.
And when we come to Luther, the results become uncomfortably clear.
Sanders's entire discussion of Luther is based on one reference
to Paul Althaus's Theology of Martin Luther (1963), one
reference to a general work on the theology of providence, and
a single quote from the 1525 work The Bondage of the Will.
The fact that this polemical 1525 work is thought by some Luther
scholars to be out of line with Luther's constructive works is
not mentioned; in fact, in this work Luther explicitly contradicts
Sanders's statement that, for Luther, "there is no God beyond
the God revealed in Jesus." What about the theology of the
deus absconditus in The Bondage of the Will, then?
There is a total silence on Luther's massive contribution to a
theology of the suffering God. Yet this theology has had a massive
impact on modern Protestant reflection, as shown by the writings
of Jurgen Moltmann and Eberhard Jungel, to name but two obvious
examples. Where are the references to the Heidelberg disputation?
to Luther's superb exposition of the deficiencies of a Nestorian
Christology, in which the implications of the Incarnation for
the suffering of God are explored?
I
found myself outraged by this lack of scholarly familiarity with
Luther and his background. However, noting the strong Arminianism
of some of the contributors to the volume, I decided to explore
whether the theology of a suffering God found in the hymns of
the noted Arminian Charles Wesley had been presented. I found
that Wesley is not even mentioned in this chapter.
The
book asks us to reject a classical evangelical understanding in
favour of something else. But why should we abandon this tradition
when, in fact, it has clearly not been fairly and thoroughly presented
in this book?"
Secondly, CT
is supposed to be flawed because of its dependence on Greek philosophy.
Is this the case? Actually, it is OT that is based far more
on philosophy than CT. The OT philosophical assumption that
determination erases relationship is never proven!
It is a fleshly conjecture that supposedly gives the right for
Open Theists to come up with a more "logically tenable" solution.
Still, this point alone is the petrol that fuels the OT engine
and it leads these men to approach the text with an agenda, not
a clean slate. Thus, rather than dealing with the text in
an honest fashion they approach it with a goal of proving their
assumption that God really must be open and relational (according
to their definition of "relational").
The response
to this accusation is always the same, "Well, you Calvinists just
leave off at mystery. You say there are some things
we should not even ask! That is intellectual suicide!"
But, as a Calvinist, I would say this is exactly what the Bible
teaches. It doesn't even mean I have to like it or that
I find it intellectually fulfilling! But where does it say
that God owes me the stimulation and satisfaction of my mind.
He tells me to love Him with my mind and at some level that has
to mean subjecting my mind to His revealed Truth. The accusation
that Calvinism ends in mystery because it is a logical, man-made
system is a smoke screen. No matter how much Boyd and others
mutilate the text, Paul meant what he said when he wrote to the
Romans concerning individual (not corporate) election, ".who are
you, O man, who answers back to God?"
It appears
that Open Theists find their freedom to question "everything"
more from the post-modern ethos of relative truth than a desire
for biblical accuracy. Pinnock says he does not "reject
this as a possibility" but one has to wonder if he and the others
have honestly examined the likelihood.
A final facet
of this supposed toppling of CT is the more "nuanced" hermeneutic
of OT to the Bible and the narrative texts in particular.
Again, OT fails to make a case. It is telling, in my mind,
that no Open Theist has addressed the phrase of Ephesians 1:11
"who works all things after the counsel of His will." Now, here is a propositional text that addresses
the heart of the issue of God's knowledge and God's providence
head on. Good biblical theology on these issues would entail
interpreting the text and showing its relation to the system.
OT blatantly avoids texts like these, however, and draws its system
from the narrative passages.
Abraham's attempted
pedocide, Moses' "calming down" of an angry Jehovah, Hezekiah's
extended life, the Lord's "regret" in making man at the time of the
Flood, His "wondering" aloud about the future, the prayer of Jesus in Gethsemane - all of these narrative
passages are examined and held up as proof that God really is
in relationship with us and as such is open to and conditioned
by our responses to Him.
Again, as delightful
as it would be to show the shoddy exegesis of these passages,
space does not permit. However, it is important to note
that an appeal to narrative passages can prove almost anything
you want - especially when you appeal only to certain verses and
statements within those passages and do not consider the parallels.
To be sure,
narrative does teach. But the art of narrative interpretation
is not some navel-gazing, "here is what it means to me," but a
careful biblical theology that holds up propositional truth as
an interpretive tool of the story. In fact, without going
too far into this discussion, it might be good to say, we have
no right to state what the story means unless the narrative
itself, or some other correlative passage explicitly states what
it means. A quick read of some of the Fathers on the parables
of Jesus will show how rapidly the expositor can fall into error
when this principle is neglected.
Thus, if the
above is true, that is, a) love alone is not the definition of
God, b) freedom and sovereignty can co-exist, c) relationship
is real even when God is sovereign, d) OT is historically inventive
and CT is not built primarily on the bedrock of Greek philosophy,
e) OT is built off of philosophy and, f) OT is guilty of an over-concentration
on narrative passages, then the conclusions of OT are wrong that,
a) God does not know the future (unless it is something He has
decreed) and, b) He is not sovereign over the minutiae of life.
OT has failed to make their case. God is sovereign, all-powerful,
eternal, incorporeal, omniscient and not like us.
Closing the Door
on Openness
The sheer mass
of material pouring out of the OT camp means there are many other
features and details that must be ignored in this paper.
The reader might be disappointed that some of these issues have
not been tackled directly, but I have attempted to include as
many footnotes and a bibliography to let you read what others
smarter than me have already written.
The OT Hermeneutic
There remains
one area of concern that no one has addressed thus far, though,
and I think it bears at least passing mention. It must not
be forgotten that the authors of OT are not coming to the text
of the Bible in the same manner most of us are. Pinnock,
for example, openly refutes inerrancy, has embraced inclusivism, has defended annihilationism, applauds feminist, catholic, charismatic scholars
and only attempts to remain in the evangelical camp because it
"is a contemporary revival of warm, missionary, biblical faith
which God is still using more than the old-line main-line side-line." In other words, it is the best out of a pretty
lousy selection.
Obviously,
to arrive at the theological position he has, (assuming that he
is fairly normative for the OT movement) means that at its primary
level, OT is really a question of hermeneutics. All the
authors defend themselves as being biblical, but that can mean
a lot of things to a lot of people.
Don Carson,
in his book, Exegetical Fallacies, lists a number of ways
in which bible students (himself included) can foul up hermeneutically. I counted 7 blatant infractions.
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Simplistic appeal to
authority. As noted above,
OT is prone to make sweeping claims about historical theology
and the church fathers. These appeals should never be
made without first giving careful study to the subject.
Just because you say a particular father said something does
not mean he did - and OT authors are guilty of depending on
isolated statements and poor second-source works to build
their case.
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Straw-manning.
This is perhaps the greatest offence of OT. The God
of CT is caricatured to the point of unrecognizability.
Pinnock writes, for example, of the CT God that He is "an
aloof monarch, removed from the contingencies of the world,
unchangeable in every aspect of being, as an all-determining
and irresistible power, aware of everything that will ever
happen and never taking risks." Added to statements like this are the plentitude
of off-hand misrepresentations like, "a solitary potentate,"
"an abstraction," "the enemy of human freedom," using the
"coercive power of a puppeteer," managing creation with His
"monopoly power," a "know-it-all" sitting in heaven "inert
and immobile," and somewhat "bored" since He cannot ever "experience
surprise and delight." Do Open Theists really expect us to believe
that this is a fair treatment of the CT position? No
Classical Theist I know would use these terms to describe
his God, these are the fabrications of an opponent who is
trying to take the focus off the failings of his own position
and make it appear stronger next to the easily toppled straw-man
of CT he has erected. This is shameful.
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Appeal to Selective Evidence.
Carson writes: "As a general rule, the more complex and/or
emotional the issue, the greater the tendency to select only
part of the evidence, prematurely construct a grid, and so
filter the rest of the evidence through the grid that it is
robbed of any substance." The examples of this offence in OT are numerous
but I shall give one glaring illustration. Consider
the OT hypothesis that God did not know how Abraham would
respond to the command to kill Isaac. Boyd makes much
out of this apparent lack of knowledge and even says it teaches
that "it was because Abraham did what he did that the Lord
now knew he was a faithful covenant partner" (Gen 22:12). Bruce Ware, interacting with Boyd on this
issue points out how Boyd has not considered the related texts
to this passage, especially Hebrews 11:19, which says, "He
(Abraham) considered that God is able to raise men (Isaac)
even from the dead; from which he also received him back as
a type." Expositing this verse, Ware concludes, "it
demonstrates without any doubt that Abraham had a God-fearing
heart leading up to his sacrifice of Isaac. Since God
knows this (all Open Theists acknowledge He has perfect knowledge
of the past and present), it is absolutely wrong to interpret
Gen 22:12 as saying that only when Abraham lifted the knife
did God 'learn' that Abraham feared God." It is easy to make the Bible say what we
want it to say when we only appeal to certain texts and certain
parts of certain texts.
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Cavalier Dismissal.
It has already been noted that OT routinely dismisses the
Calvinistic grid of understanding divine sovereignty and human
responsibility with not so much as a wave of the arm.
Rather than interact with the inner workings of this grid,
OT authors simply pronounce it unworkable. The onus
of responsibility is on them to defend that remark before
going any further.
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Falsely Qualify Extreme
Statements. Perhaps Boyd
commits this fallacy more than any other. He is often
quick to add little remarks to the end of long paragraphs
that say something like, "but God still could know everything
in the future if He wanted to." This is like trying
to play tennis with a mango. These grandiose statements
about God taking the risk of not knowing what tomorrow holds
are always softened at the last minute so as to make them
appear less offensive, presumably to neuter the rebuttal.
At least Pinnock and Sanders have no such fear of offending!
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Exaggerations.
One of the premier duties of a good salesman is to make whatever
he is selling sound better than it probably is. OT authors
fall into this trap often. For example, Richard Rice
speaks of the "numerous examples" of repentance texts in the
Bible as if every other page had God repenting. He then goes on to list almost all of them,
but leaves the reader feeling that there must be many more
out there just waiting to be pounced on.
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Emotive Appeal.
Although very similar to the
first fallacy examined in this list, the appeal to emotion
does not have to include a straw man of the enemy's position.
John Sanders begins his work with a description of his brother's
sudden, accidental death and uses this tragedy as proof that
God, who is so good and loving, cannot be in control of everything. Boyd gives a lengthy description of an abandoned
wife and concludes, "I don't know how one could effectively
minister to a person in [her] condition" unless one believed
it was all outside of God's plan. Pinnock writes, "I love to think that God
is like the partner in a dance. As we act out our steps
God is always there, leaping at just the right moments, steadying
at others and keeping perfect balance with the living reality
that we are." Or, ".we. understand God as a caring parent
with qualities of love and responsiveness, generosity and
sensitivity, openness and vulnerability, a person (rather
than a metaphysical principle) who experiences the world,
responds to what happens, relates to us and interacts dynamically
with humans. our lives make a difference to God - they are
truly significant. we are significant to God." Well, that is nice. Especially if you want
to win a dance contest with your best friend. But which
of us would suggest that our lives are insignificant to God?
Which of us has written that famous hymn, "Praise to the Lord,
the Metaphysical Principle?" Beyond the fact that Pinnock
has committed the error of taking words and forcing them to
mean the same thing for God that they do for humans, he has
also attempted to use emotion in the reader to win their approval.
One feels bad rejecting the God of OT simply because that
God sounds like a really nice guy! This is the fallacy
of emotive appeal.
Conclusion
The Dangers of
OT
The greatest
danger of OT is that it redefines who God is. The Israelites
called the golden calf YHWH, but that did not mean it was Him
(Exodus 32:5). Open Theists may use the name of God, but
that does not mean they are accurately depicting Him.
Whether they
choose to accept it or not, the real motive behind OT is to make
a god in the image of man. The God of CT does not act like a man.
He decrees things, knows things before they happen and even chooses
some people to love more than others. This will not do for Sanders, Pinnock, Boyd
and crew! History is revised, philosophy is employed and
solid exegesis is exchanged for "nuanced looks at the text."
The end result is a kind of self-gratifying theology that demeans
God and exalts reason.
It seems to
me that this strikes at the heart of OT. The desire of OT
is to make the God of the Bible knowable - not to get to know
the God of the Bible! Their assumption is that if one's
common sense is dealt a blow in the reading of the Bible, this
must mean that one has read incorrectly. Now I am sure every
Open Theist would vehemently deny this and argue that their only
desire is to understand the Word. Well. bunkum.
I question
their motives. I question their knowledge of God.
I even question their orthodoxy. The God of OT is not the
God of the Bible and those who are influenced by it will be led
away from their Maker to a deity of their own imagination.
May the Lord be gracious to use us to intervene and preach the
Truth so that none under our charge hear the mocking words, "You
thought I was just like you!" (Psalm 50:21).
The Benefits
of OT
It may seem
strange after the last paragraph to list benefits of OT, however,
since I fully believe that God is able to use all things to His
glory, I list three.
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OT puts into words what
a lot of people already think.
It might surprise us to read some paragraphs of Boyd's work
aloud in our congregation and ask for a vote on its accuracy.
I believe this is because OT is the logical conclusion of
making a god in your own image. If you only think of
God in terms of an exalted man this is what you get.
It seems to me that this is part of the reason why the Lord
takes such great pains to ask questions of His people like,
"To Whom then will you liken Me?" (Isaiah 40:25). The
tendency is to treat and think of God as a man, albeit a really
large and generally good one ("the big guy upstairs").
But, special revelation is iconoclastic in the sense that
it is continually exploding our false conceptions (idols?)
of the Lord. OT can be a help in that somebody is finally
saying what many already think. Now, we can take what
they say and, as a teaching tool show the fallacy of it to
our sheep.
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OT ought to refine our
theology