- do you know the future, apart from what you yourself set out to do by your own power in it, and are sure you will accomplish? you have stated God does not know the future except for what He Himself purposes to do by His power in it. so why are you arguing with yourself?
- misrepresentation: i was talking about me, an human, saying "try" -- in any case God tries and does not ever fail -- but that doesn't mean "putting forth effort" doesn't count as "trying"
- misrepresentation, again: i said, and open theism openly says, and you yourself have said multiple times in this thread, that God is "writ large" ignorant of the future. of course He knows what He is going to do. but you, an open theist, claim He has no idea what you or i will do, except in the very special case that you or i are fulfilling prophecy -- you have argued strongly that God is ignorant of 99% of the future for 20 pages. so why are you arguing with yourself now?
1. You are putting God in the same category as men on the basis that: He can only know the future he has himself decided will definitely happen and he is 100% successful in achieving those settled goals according to His omnipotent power; and I can only know the future I have myself decided I will try to make happen, which I am <100% successful in achieviand I said: ng according to my limited power
I see those two statements as non sequitur. That puts every creature and God in one category.
2. You said: Open theism claims 2. That an
omnipotent God has to
try to bring about His [prophesied] purpose.
I said that is incorrect. Open theism says that God has all power and it is no effort at all for Him to make his unconditionally prophesied purposes happen.
You responded: misrepresentation: i was talking about me, an human, saying "try" -- in any case God tries and does not ever fail -- but that doesn't mean "putting forth effort" doesn't count as "trying"
My answer is: Trying is either
putting in effort to achieve something, whether it is achieved or not. One can achieve certain things without trying at all.
Or trying is
acting without effort, but perhaps with ingenuity, to produce a result but failing to achieve it.
But trying is not
acting to achieve a goal without effort and achieving it. In such a case we say, "I wasn't even trying ."
By none of these definitions does God
try to bring about His prophesied purposes.
3. You claimed that Open Theism claims: That God is
completely ignorant of the future (when future means "events that will eventually become real".
I replied that He knows those events that he promises unconditionally will happen.
You now say: i said, and open theism openly says,
and you yourself have said multiple times in this thread, that God is "writ large" ignorant of the future. of course He knows what He is going to do.
but you, an open theist, claim He has no idea what you or i will do, except in the very special case that you or i are fulfilling prophecy --
you have argued strongly that God is ignorant of 99% of the future for 20 pages. so why are you arguing with yourself now?
I have never said "
God is "writ large" ignorant of the future."
Open theism says that the future is not settled until free will decisions are made in subsequent presents. Future choices are unresolved possibilities. Since reality is that the future is a network of unresolved possibilities, and God knows all reality, God arguably knows the future as a network of unresolved possibilities, i.e. He knows all the possible choices and all the possibilities that are contingent on those choices.
If this is the open theist view, then it is clearly untrue of open theism to say that they "
claim God has no idea what you or i will do, except in the very special case that you or i are fulfilling prophecy."
It is also untrue that Open theists "
have argued strongly that God is ignorant of 99% of the future."
If the future only exists in relation to the present as mainly a network of possibilities, and God knows all those possibilities, then according to Open Theism, He knows what can be known of the future very thoroughly.