I recently finished listening to the audio version of The Plot (thanks to the great generosity of a TOLer who I will not name). It was fascinating, and the grace/law distinction made seems to have a lot of merit and certainly clears up a lot of "questionable passages."
However, I still have problems with Mr. Enyart's conclusions concerning God's ability to know the future. In the course of the discussion, Mr. Enyart references several instances of prophecies that did not "come true." For example, Jonah told the Ninevites that they would be destroyed in 40 days. They repented, however, and were not destroyed.
Mr. Enyart admits that in the instances of prophecies not coming true, at least implicitly, the prophecy is conditional. That is, God says he will do A if X happens, but not if Y happens. The "but not if Y happens" is at times not directly stated, as in the case of Jonah. However, the only way such a prophesy could not come true is if either the subject of the prophecy does A and X does not happen or does not do A and X happens.
Are there any examples of this occuring in the Bible? If not, then the prophecies can not be said to have not come true, and the examples given say nothing of God's ability to know the future.
However, I still have problems with Mr. Enyart's conclusions concerning God's ability to know the future. In the course of the discussion, Mr. Enyart references several instances of prophecies that did not "come true." For example, Jonah told the Ninevites that they would be destroyed in 40 days. They repented, however, and were not destroyed.
Mr. Enyart admits that in the instances of prophecies not coming true, at least implicitly, the prophecy is conditional. That is, God says he will do A if X happens, but not if Y happens. The "but not if Y happens" is at times not directly stated, as in the case of Jonah. However, the only way such a prophesy could not come true is if either the subject of the prophecy does A and X does not happen or does not do A and X happens.
Are there any examples of this occuring in the Bible? If not, then the prophecies can not be said to have not come true, and the examples given say nothing of God's ability to know the future.