Is the Future a ‘Done Deal?’
Reconsidering Divine Omniscience
By C. S. Cowles
Does God know the future exhaustively? Does He know the
date and circumstances of your death or the color of your unborn great-grandchildren’s
eyes? Does God know who will finally be in heaven and hell?
Absolutely! Thus saith theologians from St. Augustine in
the fourth century to Evangelicals in the 21st. If God is perfect in all
His attributes, and if knowledge is one of His essential attributes, then
it follows that God knows all things perfectly including the future. That
God knows the future exhaustively has to be the case, according to John
Calvin, for what God predestines, He obviously foreknows. Though James
Arminius took issue with Calvin over the role of free will in determining
human destiny, he accepted the classical view of divine omniscience that
holds that God stands outside and beyond the time-space continuum, and
thus sees the past, present, and future as an eternal present.
Consequently, whether determined by divine decree (Calvin)
or human choices (Arminius), or as is more likely, some combination of
the two, the future is already settled. Methodist theologian Tom Oden
writes, “God does not perceive fragmentarily as humans perceive,
as if from a particular nexus of time, but knows exhaustively, in eternal
simultaneity.”1 To suggest otherwise, cautions Bruce Ware, is to
deny God’s “absolute lordship over all space and time, his
universal and inviolable sovereignty, his flawlessly wise and meticulous
providence, his undiminished and infinite perfection, and his majestic
and incomparable glory.”2
The Case for a Closed Future
Though the classical ‘omni’ descriptions of
God’s essential attributes are derived primarily from Neoplatonic
ideas of His hyper-transcendence and immutability, this does not mean
they have no scriptural basis. To the contrary, many biblical texts can
be cited that seem to support God’s exhaustive knowledge of all
future events.
I God is often portrayed as the sovereign Lord of the entire sweep
of human history: “I am God, and there is no other; I am God, and
there is none like me. I make known the end from the beginning, from ancient
times, what is still to come” (Isaiah 46:9-10; see 48:3-5).
Long before the Israelites even existed as a people, God
told Abraham his offspring would sojourn in Egypt for 400 years, and afterward
would “come out with great possessions” (Genesis 15:13-14).
Jeremiah predicted that after 70 years God would restore
the exiles to their land (chapter 29).
Twice in Scripture, prophets named individuals and described
events in their lives before they were born (1 Kings 13:2-3; 2 Kings 22:1,
23:15-16; Isaiah 44:28; Psalm 139:16).
A striking number of Old Testament prophecies concerning
Jesus were fulfilled. Sixteen times in Matthew alone, we find some variation
of this expression: “All this took place to fulfill what the Lord
had said through the prophet” (Matthew 1:22).
God not only foreknew but also foreordained Christ’s
coming from “before the foundation of the world” (1 Peter
1:20). And three times in Mark’s Gospel alone, Jesus predicted His
own passion, death, and resurrection (Mark 8:31).
Both testaments contain more than enough end-time prophecies
showing “[Jesus’] servants what must soon take place”
(Revelation 1:1) to give specialists in eschatology fertile soil to plow.
Given the role prophecy plays in the Scriptures, it seems
abundantly clear that “what we consider to be future events are
to God not future but present events, so what we call divine foreknowledge
is to God simply present knowledge.”3 Thus, the biblical evidence
and the logic derived from it offer incontrovertible support for the classical
view of divine omniscience. Or does it?
Problems with the Classical View
While these passages “celebrate God’s sovereign
control over the future,” Gregory Boyd cautions, “They do
not teach that the future is exhaustively settled.”4 When viewed
in their larger context, these proof-texts show that while some things
about the future are determined solely by God and thus fully known to
Him, many others are not. When God says, for instance, “I make known
the end from the beginning, from ancient times, what is still to come,”
the verse does not end there. It goes on to say, “My purpose will
stand, and I will do all that I please” (Isaiah 46:9-10, emphasis
added). The foreknowledge spoken of in this passage, and many others like
it, has to do with God’s purposes and intentions. This, however,
does not necessarily refer to all futures. The Scriptures make it abundantly
clear, from Adam to Armageddon, that while God’s plans are to prosper
us and not to harm us (Jeremiah 29:11), His gracious purposes are often
thwarted by human perfidy. Boyd concludes, “The future is partly
open and partly closed.”5
There is a larger problem with the traditional understanding
of divine omniscience. Even if it is allowed that humans play a significant
role in shaping the future, it is still determinism by another name. To
claim, as Oden does, “Human freedom remains freedom, significantly
self-determining, even [though] divinely foreknown”6 involves a
logical impossibility: namely, the future cannot unfold in any other way
than that which God foresees. Thus, our intuition of freedom is illusory
in that the only option open to us is the one already known to God. To
claim otherwise would be to admit a deficiency in His omniscience.
If one were to think about it, the classical model of omniscience
drains all the drama out of life. It is the difference between being in
the stands at the Rose Bowl watching a live NCAA National Championship
football game where the outcome is in doubt until the clock runs out,
and viewing a video of that same game. The notion that God knew both the
game and its outcome exhaustively from “before the foundation of
the world” not only strains credulity but also renders all such
contests farcical.
Perhaps the real issue is not the scope of God’s foreknowledge,
but rather a flawed understanding of time. The classical doctrine of divine
omniscience assumes time is a closed continuum with a precise beginning
and end, and all its constituent elements are already fixed. We who are
within that nexus of time experience it as past, present, and future.
God, however, “as independent, necessary being views all times as
eternal now.”7
To illustrate how this works, C. S. Lewis offered the analogy
of a parade, and the difference between what a person standing on the
sidewalk sees as opposed to another who views it from the top of a very
tall building. The person on the ground can take in only that tiny slice
of the parade passing through his limited field of vision. The person
on top of the tall building, however, sees the whole parade from beginning
to end. Furthermore, she sees it not in terms of ‘already’
and ‘not yet,’ but as a whole, timeless piece.
That analogy works wonderfully until we ask, “What
if there is no parade?” Can the observer on the top of the building
see a parade that as yet has no existence? Granted, she may have watched
enough parades to have a clear idea of what this particular parade might
look like, and may even have in hand, like the Rose Parade telecasters,
a preprinted program spelling out every facet of the parade in minute
detail. Yet, given the infinite number of contingencies involved when
dealing with fallible machines, fickle animals, and unpredictable humans,
it may be asked if even the most astute observer can know how this particular
parade is going to unfold, or whether it will happen at all.
Perhaps the fundamental question regarding divine omniscience
is not theological but epistemological: can that which as yet has no existence
be known exhaustively? Granted, God’s knowledge of natural law and
human proclivities is without limit. Thus, He is in a position to predict,
with a high degree of probability, what might occur. However, given the
often chaotic and random nature of inanimate physical elements interacting
with all animate creatures, especially human, can even God know for sure
how it is all going to turn out? Certainly, He knows all that can be known.
He knows His own mind and what He has purposed to do, and may know every
possibility exhaustively.
However, can God see precisely a particular future that
does not yet exist until it actually occurs? That is, if humans are genuinely
free to choose between multiple alternatives. Not knowing what cannot
be known does not represent a deficiency in God’s omniscience, but
a frank acknowledgement of the unfolding nature of the time/space continuum
He himself created. Every new day is a new creation full of virtually
infinite possibilities that cannot be known exhaustively until that day
dawns and is actualized.
The Case for an Open Future
While isolated texts may be extracted from the Scriptures
that lend support to the classical doctrine of divine omniscience, the
whole sweep of the biblical narrative strongly favors an open view of
the future. The six days of creation, for instance, suggest time is not
an already fixed datum but an unfolding ‘coming into being’
reality. Consider this sampling of biblical evidence that presumes a genuinely
open future for the world, humankind, and God.
The operative divine command at every stage of the creative
process is, “Let there be” (Genesis 1:3ff.). Can that which
as yet has no ‘being’ be known exhaustively before it actually
exists, especially in its myriad interactions with other ‘beings’
that also have inherent autonomy and potencies?
God is reported as curious as to what names Adam will give
to the animals (Genesis 2:19), which would not be the case if He already
knew. It is instructive to note that the Qur’an reports Allah telling
Adam what to name the animals. This, of course, is in accord with the
doctrine of divine determinism at the heart of Islamic as well as Calvin’s
theology.
God seems surprised that Adam and Eve would succumb to the
serpent’s suggestions, and that they would flee from His presence.
Thus He calls plaintively, “Adam, where are you?” (Genesis
3:9).
God is shocked at the appalling depths of “wickedness”
and “corruption” to which pre-Flood human beings had fallen.
If He could have foreseen how they would abuse their freedom, why would
He say, “I am grieved that I have made them” (Genesis 6:8)?
When the newly liberated Israelites reverted to idolatry
in the matter of the golden calf, the Lord threatened to destroy them
all, and raise up a new covenant people from Moses’ progeny. Moses,
however, would have none of it. Not only did he passionately intercede
for his people but reminded Yahweh of the covenant He made to “Abraham,
Isaac, and Israel, to whom you swore by your own self” (Exodus 32:13).
Remarkably, “the Lord repented of the evil which he thought to do
unto his people” (Exodus 32:14, KJV). Surely, this presents an enigma
for defenders of God’s exhaustive foreknowledge.
God is often surprised by what humans do, such as when He
expected the vineyard to yield grapes, but it yielded wild grapes (Isaiah
5:2-5). He says of Israel, “I thought . . . she would return to
me; but she did not” (Jeremiah 3:6-7, see also 19-20). Three times
in Jeremiah alone, the Lord expresses shock over Israel’s ungodly
behavior by saying they were doing things “I did not command or
mention, nor did it enter my mind” (Jeremiah 19:5; 7:31; 32:35).
Clearly, humans are capable of actions God neither foreknows nor even
imagines. God can be and is often ‘surprised.’
God changed His mind about the perpetuity of both Eli’s
house and Saul’s dynasty (1 Samuel 2:30-31; 13:13; 14:35). He changed
His mind about destroying Nineveh (Jonah 3:10). Forty times in the Old
Testament He is reported as having changed His mind, most often in response
to intercessory prayer (Numbers 11:1-2; 14:12-20; 16:20-35, 41-48; Deuteronomy
9:13-25; Judges 10:13-16; 2 Samuel 24:17-25). Which raises the question:
how can God change His mind about that which, in His mind at least, is
already eternally settled?
Often in Scripture the extent of God’s involvement
is conditioned upon human response (Exodus 13:17; Jeremiah 26:3, 19; Matthew
26:39; 2 Peter 3:9, 12). Human initiative, as it interfaces with God’s
will and purposes, creates a future fundamentally different from other
possible futures had the choices and actions been different.
There are a striking number of instances where biblical
prophecies were not fulfilled. Joseph’s father never bowed down
to him (Genesis 37:9-10). The Assyrians did not destroy Jerusalem in the
8th century B.C. (Micah 3:9-12). Israel’s return from Babylonian
exile did not usher in a golden age (Isaiah 41:14-20; Jeremiah 30:1-11).
Despite Ezekiel’s prophecy, Nebuchadnezzar did not conquer the city
of Tyre (Ezekiel 26-27). Jesus did not cast the wicked into the fire as
John the Baptist had prophesied (Luke 3:1-9). Joel’s prediction
that the advent of the Holy Spirit would be accompanied by spectacular
cosmic disturbances did not occur (Acts 2:19-20). Paul was mistaken about
the timing of the second coming (1 Thessalonians 4:17). “God is
free in the manner of fulfilling prophecy,” notes Clark Pinnock,
“and is not bound to a script, even his own. The world is a project
and God works on it creatively; he is free to strike out in new directions.”8
More important than any number of proof-texts, the whole
sweep of the Bible paints a portrait of a dynamic covenant-partnership
between God and humankind where human choices and actions really matter,
and in which the future is genuinely open. The very fact that the conditional
“if” appears several thousands of times in Scripture implies
that humans are continually confronted with a variety of real possibilities,
and these in turn have a vast range of consequences that cannot be known
exhaustively until they occur.
Does such a view diminish God’s sovereignty and detract from His
glory, as critics of Open Theism such as Bruce Ware claim? Not at all.
It takes a far greater and more innovative sovereign to govern a dynamic
and changing world populated by truly free moral agents than it does to
direct a world of automatons where the outcome of everything is already
known in advance. A chess master, for instance, cannot know for sure what
moves a novice might make, but has no doubt about who will win the game.
So it is that God does not have to know all the twists and turns history
will take, or know exhaustively its eventual outcomes for His ultimate
saving purposes to prevail.
Practical Benefits of Open Theism
So, one might ask: What difference does all this make? Not
much, at least in essential matters such as salvation, sanctification,
and godly living. Yet in more subtle ways it makes all the difference
in the world, especially in our understanding of God. As A. W. Tozer observed,
“A right conception of God is basic, not only to systematic theology,
but to practical living as well.”9
First, an open future makes a difference in how we think
about God. All forms of determinism suffer from the same defect: they
tend to conceive of God as a remote Central Planner, a Cosmic CEO, whose
lofty vantage-point and limitless perspective enable Him to remain above
the struggles, anxieties, and messiness of life as we experience it. It
is hard to imagine God being even mildly concerned, much less stressed,
over any situation, no matter how critical, when He already knows the
outcome.
While the classical model offers comfort to those who need
a celestial ‘unmoved mover’ upon whom to lean, it does not
accord with the portrait of God painted in both testaments and fleshed
out in Jesus of Nazareth. The God of that portrait is a God of agape love
who deeply cares about people, who ever strives with individuals as if
the course of their lives and eternal destiny is far from settled, and
who is fiercely committed to their temporal and eternal wellbeing. From
Genesis to Revelation we see a God who gets down into the mud and muck
of our sin-cursed world, who is deeply affected by the response of humans
to His gracious overtures, and who gets bruised and bloodied in His desperate
battle against the forces of darkness in His passionate effort to reconcile
a lost “world unto himself” in Christ (2 Corinthians 5:19).
Second, an open future makes a difference in how we pray.
Believing the future is already exhaustively settled cuts the heart out
of prayer. If the future is closed, then why pray? The oft-cited cliché,
“prayer changes us, not God,” neither corresponds to our own
intuition nor is reflective of the massive testimony of Scripture regarding
the efficacy of petitionary prayer. Would Jesus have taught us to pray
the “Our Father” prayer, which voices no fewer than six specific
petitions, if prayer was powerless to change the future in significant
ways?
Both testaments reveal a God who passionately desires to
enter into a covenant-partnership with those whom He created in his own
image (Genesis 1:26; see Psalm 25:14), one in which both are involved
in creating a particular future. Prayer is the primary arena where this
partnership is initiated, deepened, and worked out. This divine-human
relationship can be compared to a pair of ice skaters who are responsive
to each other’s slightest move, and who interact with each other
in a coordinated dance of beauty and grace. Even though they may have
choreographed every move and practiced their routine a thousand times,
neither knows for sure how this particular performance is going to play
out until it does.
Third, an open future makes a difference in our motivation
to fulfill the Great Commission. If God already knows the number and identity
of those who will finally be saved and lost, then why bother to evangelize
aggressively? It renders unintelligible Jesus’ stern warning, “unless
you repent, you too will all perish” (Luke 13:5), as well as more
than 70 of His gracious invitations in the Gospels to believe, to follow,
and to obey.
On the other hand, when we read with what passion the good
shepherd seeks for that one lost sheep, with what urgency the woman searches
the house for that one lost coin, and with what yearning the father scans
the horizon for a glimpse of that wastrel of a son (Luke 15), we get the
impression that the outcome of the seeking, yearning, and searching is
not already settled. Likewise, when Jesus said, “Behold, I stand
at the door and knock; if anyone hears My voice and opens the door, I
will come in to him and will dine with him, and he with Me” (Revelation
3:20, nasb), there is the inference that even He does not know for sure
if the door to that particular heart will open. Otherwise, why would He
knock? And why should we?
Finally, an open future accords with the Wesleyan view that
God’s essential nature is love. Clark Pinnock observes, “The
open view of God grows out of the ideological
. . . soil of Wesleyan-Arminianism. It belongs to traditions that affirm
human freedom and deny total divine control.”10 God is absolutely
sovereign, yet for love’s sake has surrendered His sovereignty at
the point of human freedom. God is absolutely omniscient, yet for love’s
sake has bound himself into not an already fixed but the ever unfolding
time-space continuum in which we live out our lives. Thus, for Him as
for us, the future is not a ‘done deal’ and cannot be known
exhaustively until it happens. John Sanders puts it succinctly: “The
type of relationship God offers his people is not one of control and domination
but rather one of powerful love and vulnerability. . . . The divine project
of developing people who freely enter into a loving and trusting relationship
with God lacks an unconditional guarantee of success.”11
Few have expressed this risky and scary dance of love and
freedom that is the heart and soul of our covenant-partnership with God
better than C. S. Lewis:
Why did God give [humans] free will? Because free will,
though it makes evil possible, is also the only thing that makes possible
any love or goodness or joy worth having. . . . The happiness which God
designs for his higher creatures is the happiness of being freely, voluntarily
united to him and to each other in an ecstasy of love and delight compared
with which the most rapturous love between a man and a woman on earth
is mere milk and water. And for that they must be free.12
And, we might add, “for that” the future must
be open.
Dr. Cowles is professor emeritus of Bible, Theology, and Preaching at
Northwest Nazarene University. He is also adjunct professor at Point Loma
Nazarene University.
1. Thomas C. Oden, The Living God: Systematic Theology (San Francisco:
HarperSanFrancisco, 1987), I, 70.
2. Bruce Ware, God’s Lesser Glory: The Diminishing
God of Open Theism (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books, 2000), 41.
3. Oden, 74.
4. Gregory Boyd, God of the Possible: A Biblical Introduction
to the Open View of God (Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 2000), 29.
5. Boyd, 33.
6. Oden, 73.
7. Ibid., 74.
8. Clark Pinnock, Most Moved Mover: A Theology of God’s
Openness (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2001), 51.
9. A. W. Tozer, The Knowledge of the Holy, (New York:
Harper & Row, 1961), 6.
10. Pinnock, 106.
11. John Sanders, The God Who Risks: A Theology of
Providence (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1998), 88-89.
12. C. S. Lewis, Mere Christianity (New York: Simon
& Schuster, 1996), 49.
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