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Thursday, November 18, 2004

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>>  The 'Openness of God' and the Future of Evangelical Theology

[Editor's Note:  The Evangelical Theological Society is meeting this
week in San Antonio, Texas.  The following article was first published
last year during the ETS meeting, when the main topic of concern was how
to deal with a theological movement known as "Open Theism."  One year
later, this issue is no less important.]

Theology will be front and center at this week's meeting of the
Evangelical Theological Society in Atlanta, Georgia.  This is not a year
for business as usual, for the society will be confronting charges
brought against two of its members.  Given the nature of the charges,
one or both of these individuals may be removed from membership in the
society.  Why?  The answer to that question points to one of the most
significant controversies facing contemporary evangelicals.

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The theologians in question, Clark Pinnock and John Sanders, are both
proponents of a theological movement known as "Open Theism."  In sum,
open theists argue for a new model of understanding God's knowledge--a
model that insists that true human freedom requires that God cannot know
human decisions in advance. 

Actually, open theists deny God's omniscience in matters that go beyond
human decisions.  The worldview promoted by open theists is based in a
high degree of confidence that God will be able to direct the future in
a general way, but open theists deny that God can possess infallible and
comprehensive knowledge of the future.  In essence, God is waiting with
the rest of us to know how any number of issues will turn out. 

Promoted by Pinnock and Sanders, along with other popular theologians
such as Gregory Boyd, the open theists present a more user-friendly
deity, less offensive to many moderns.  This new model of God, based in
something like what Clark Pinnock calls "creative love theism,"
redefines the God of the Bible and denies the classical understanding of
God's sovereignty, knowledge, and power.

Bruce Ware, a careful critic of open theism, summarizes the movement in
this way: "This movement takes its name from the fact that its adherents
view much of the future as 'open' rather than closed, even to God.  Much
of the future, that is, is yet undecided, and hence it is unknown to
God.  God knows all that can be known, open theists assure us.  But
future free choices and actions, because they haven't happened yet, do
not exist, and so God (even God) cannot know them." 

As Ware explains, "God cannot know what does not exist, they claim, and
since the future does not now exist, God cannot know it."  Most
importantly, open theists argue that God cannot know what free creatures
will choose or do in the future.  Thus, "God learns moment-by-moment
what we do, when we do it, and His plans must constantly be adjusted to
what actually happens, in so far as this is different than what He
anticipated."

In two important books, God's Lesser Glory: The Diminished God of Open
Theism and Their God is Too Small [both from Crossway Books], Ware
provides a responsible and careful analysis of the open theists'
arguments.  Ware takes these thinkers seriously, and judges their
argument by the Bible.  In so doing, he concludes that the open view of
God "poses a challenge to the evangelical church that is unparalleled in
this generation." 

The doctrine of God is the central organizing principal of Christian
theology, and it establishes the foundation of all other theological
principles.  Evangelical Christians believe in the unity of truth. 
Therefore a shift in the doctrine of God--much less of this
consequence--necessarily implies shifts and transformations in all other
doctrines.

The open theists point to biblical passages that speak of God repenting
or changing His mind.  Rather than interpreting those passages in
keeping with the explicit statements of Scripture that God knows the
future perfectly, the open theists turn the theological system on its
head, and interpret the clear teaching of Scripture through the
narratives--rather than the other way round.

They also counsel that their "open" view of God is more helpful than
classical Christian theism.  After all, they advise, it allows God "off
the hook" when things do not go as we had hoped. 

In a now notorious example, Greg Boyd tells of a woman whose plans for
missionary service were ruined by the adultery of her husband and
subsequent divorce.  This woman, Boyd relates, went to her pastor for
counsel, asking him how God could have led her to have married this
young man, only to see the marriage end in adultery and disaster.  This
pastor [presumably Boyd himself?] assured the woman that God shared her
surprise and disappointment in how the young man turned out.

Most evangelicals would be shocked to meet this updated model of God
face to face.  Nevertheless, subtle shifts in evangelical conviction
have been undermining Christianity's biblical concept of God. 

Belief in God's absolute knowledge has united theologians in the
evangelical, Catholic, and Orthodox traditions.  Denials of divine
omniscience have been limited to heretical movements like the Socinians.
 Even where Calvinists and Arminians have differed on the relationship
between the divine will and foreknowledge, they have stood united in
affirming God's absolute, comprehensive, and unconditional knowledge of
the future.

Several years ago, a major study of religious belief revealed just how
radically our culture has compromised the doctrine of God.  Sociologists
asked the question, "Do you believe in a God that can change the course
of events on earth?"  One answer, which became the title of the study,
was "No, just the ordinary one."  That is to say, modern men and women
seem to feel no need to believe in a God who can change the course of
events on earth--just an "ordinary God" who is an innocent bystander
observing human events.

Measured against the biblical revelation, this is not God at all.  The
God of the Bible is not a bystander in human events.  Throughout the
Scriptures, God speaks of His own unlimited power, sovereign will, and
perfect knowledge.

This model of divine sovereignty is explicitly denied by the open
theists.  As Clark Pinnock explains, "God is sovereign according to the
Bible in the sense of having the power to exist in himself and the power
to call forth the universe out of nothing by his Word.  But God's
sovereignty does not have to mean what some theists and atheists claim,
namely, the power to determine each detail in the history of the world."
 

The obvious question to ask at this point is this: Just which details
does God choose to determine?  Pinnock's "creative love theism" is,
regardless of his intentions, a way of taking theism out of theology. 
This God is so redefined that He bears little resemblance to the God of
the Bible. 

Pinnock and his colleagues argue that evangelicals must transform our
understanding of God into a model that is more "culturally compelling." 
Where does this end?  The culture gets to define our model of God?

Open theism does not stand alone.  Acceptance of this model will require
a complete transformation of evangelical conviction.  A redefinition of
the doctrine of God leads immediately to the redefinition of the Gospel.
 A reformulation of our understanding of God's knowledge leads
inescapably to a reformulation of how God relates to the world.

Indeed, some have gone so far as to call for an "evangelical
mega-shift," that would completely transform evangelical conviction for
a new generation.  Even granting the open theist the highest
motivations, the result of their theological transformation would be
unmitigated disaster for the church.

The late B.B. Warfield remarked that God could be removed altogether
from some systematic theologies without any material impact on the other
doctrines in the system.  My fear is that this indictment can be
generalized of much contemporary evangelical theology.  As the culture
draws to a close, evangelicals are not arguing over the denominational
issues that marked the debate of the twentieth century's early years. 
The issues are now far more serious.

Sadly, evangelicals are now debating the central doctrine of Christian
theism.  The question is whether evangelicals will affirm and worship
the sovereign and purposeful God of the Bible, or shift their allegiance
to the limited God of the modern mega-shift.

At stake is not only the future of the Evangelical Theological Society,
but of evangelical theology itself.  Regardless of how the votes go in
Atlanta, this issue is likely to remain on the front burner of
evangelical attention for years to come. 

The debate over open theism is another reminder that theology is too
important to be left to the theologians.  Open theism must be a matter
of concern for the whole church.  This much is certain--God is not
waiting to see how this vote turns out.


____________________________________

R. Albert Mohler, Jr. is president of The Southern Baptist Theological
Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky.  For more articles and resources by
Dr. Mohler, and for information on The Albert Mohler Program, a daily
national radio program broadcast on the Salem Radio Network, go to
www.albertmohler.com.  For information on The Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary, go to www.sbts.edu.  Send feedback to
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