Consider this....
The only way to prove the validity of doing otherwise is to assume foreknowledge.
Muz made a great point in saying that we are unable to know for sure that we did other than A if A is unknown. For example, I assume that I will wash my car, but then I don't. The assumption of what I foreknow I will do proves the validity that I did otherwise.
If doing otherwise is only able to be validated if the action is assumed to be foreknown, then.....
Either;
LFW's definition is untrue because it is unverifiable because of the lack of the assumed foreknowledge,
or
LFW's definition assumes that foreknowledge is present and therefore is able to make the statement 'able to do otherwise' and rejects a conflict between foreknowledge and free will as being true.
Please don't be too hasty in coming to a conlusion on this. This requires some thought.
Thanks for your thoughtful yet narrow and limited reply.
Hasty? I've been reading this garbledeegook for days and reached my conclusion after years of wrestling with the issues ... long before you boiled truth and reality down to two options; neither having anything to do with the view of Open Theism.
I say it is garbledeegook only because it is totally irrelevant to the view you are arguing against. You don't even entertain the Open View premise in your two options above! You show no evidence that you even understand Open Theism by your persistence to put forth arguments and offer options that have no meaning in an unsettled future. So, hear me out.
OR (option #3 omitted above)
Foreknowledge as definite/exact knowledge of future events as if they already happened rather than possible, promised and/or achievable goals, is mere theological fiction/invention which has no sound basis in scripture whatsoever. It is the result of exaggerations of texts read in isolation from the over all truth about God.
Robe, your position has absolutely no opposite or opposing argument in Open Theism. That is the idiocy of trying to discuss it in a meaningful way with you. It is meaningless from an Open Theism point of view because (for us) in a realistic world view there is not anything to
foreknow as you define foreknowledge. Open Theists approach the future with hope while living in the already reality of that COMING future by grace in love because we have placed our faith in the One who both can and will achieve the end results He has established as certain even if they are yet to be fully achieved. That is why we must speak of the Kingdom of God as both
now and
not yet. The reign of God is not yet complete (it is being resisted) yet IS both a present reality (at least in part but never the less real) and is a future certainty because God is (among other things as you rightly pointed out) faithful and able.
The argument you raise doesn’t even inter into the equation for Open Theism. The future simply doesn’t exist. NOT YET! There is nothing to foreknow as fact. But there are things we can expect as certain. Things both
mundane (you might wash your car) and things
earth shattering (the sun will ‘come up’ tomorrow IF God doesn’t intervene) and things
cosmic (Christ Jesus will return, the Kingdom will come and it will last forever). NOTHING will prevent God from accomplishing His intention even if He changes His mind about
mundane or even
earth-shattering things. There is only a future to be shaped and reached not one already known as existent. The future God plans and will bring about remains a goal and yet it is even now BECOMING a reality in the lives of those in Christ and God in infinite wisdom uses all His attributes and unlimited resources to achieve that future. He will not fail even if we do not reach the future with God. Some just refer to that as death/the final judgment or eternal punishment/damnation. Call it what you want; it amounts to a future void of God.
“A” and a million “not As” present themselves as choices daily and when one has been chosen and acted on every other possibility becomes otherwise at that instant and “A” becomes a known reality that influence and helps shape the not yet and somewhat different future. (Will you be driving a cleaner or dirtier car tomorrow?) No one can destroy the future God has planned as the end of this world and the creation of the next by simply making bad choices moment by moment. But, you can bet your best bippy we can most certainly miss the future God has planed for us by making the bad (sinful) choice to trust in and pursue our own imagined futures. The end of that way that
seemeth right unto man (the future that doesn’t believe in and move toward the future God plans and invites us to join) is destruction. Not the destruction of the future that God will reach and carry
believers into, but self-destruction which is in reality NO FUTURE AT ALL.
God has planned and made provision for all to experience His future. God may have finished creating the world in six days; but God is very actively involved at the present re-creating us for the future He is now preparing. You may certainly do otherwise. Some call it LFW and try to force it into an imagined future. Others just refer to it as God given freedom to follow Jesus into His Kingdom (THE future) in faith ... or not.
New creature living in hope and expectation,
Philetus
Simple response: Don't impose your petty little options on the God of Open Theism.
The only way to prove the validity of doing otherwise is to just do it and then explain it to everyone else when you get to hell.:chuckle: