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| RICHARD L. MAYHUE |
Richard L. Mayhue TMSJ12/2 (Fall 2001) 203-220
Senior Vice President and Dean Professor of Pastoral Ministries and Theology
"Professing to be wise, they became fools, and exchanged the glory of the incorruptible God for an image in the form of corruptible man. . ." (Rom 1:22-23). Admittedly, "openness" advocates have not yet strayed this far, but they are, in this reviewer's opinion, further away from the truth and closer to idolatry than they realize or care to admit. This neo-processian movement1 has so disturbed the evangelical community at-large that one clear-minded thinker has observed, "[T]he crisis of evangelical theism is seen in the denial of the God of classical theism as sovereign, transcendent, omnipotent, and omniscient."2
1A term used by Robert A. Morey in "Does God Really Know the Future?,"
Journal of Biblical Apologetics 2/1 (Spring 2001):5-18, who believes that the thinking of
openness proponents is closer to process theism than it is to classical theism. Also see his
Battle of the Gods (Southbridge, Mass.: Crown, 1989). 203 204 The Master's Seminary Journal This review article
will evaluate Gregory A. Boyd's volume, God of the Possible,3 which
espouses a view of God called the "Open" view. Boyd teaches "that the future exists partly as
actualities (future events which God sovereignly determines to bring about) and partly as
possibilities (aspects of the future which God sovereignly allows His creatures to bring about)."
4 About the Author and His Book Who Is Gregory A. Boyd? Why Review God of the Possible?
3Gregory A. Boyd, God of the Possible: A Biblical Introduction to the Open
View of God (Grand Rapids: Baker, 2000), hereafter referred to as GP. The Impossibility of God of the Possible 205 Pinnock (The
Openness of God) has asserted, "[W]e believe that the open view of God needs to be
appraised by a broader public, one beyond the confines of professional theologians and
philosophers." Many would doubt whether Pinnock accomplished this specific purpose in his
rather technical volume. However, Boyd has contributed a better effort in accord with his stated
purpose. "I believe there is currently a need to present this issue in a manner that can include as
many lay people as possible. This book attempts to do just that" (GP 13). God of the Possible Develops What Core Ideas?
7Cf. "Evangelical Megashift'(2/19/90); "Has God Been Held Hostage by
Philosophy?" (1/9/95); "The Future of Evangelical Theology" (2/9/98); "God vs. God" (2/7/00);
"God at Risk" (3/5/01); "Truth at Risk" (4/23/01); and "Does God Know Your Next Move?" Pt.
1 (5/21/01), Pt. 2 (6/1 1/01), 206 The Master's Seminary Journal
Several weeks later (April 29, 1989), he observed, "But to assume He knows ahead of time how
every person is going to freely act assumes that each person's free activity is already there to
knoweven before he freely does it! But it's not" (Skeptic 30). How Is God of the Possible Presented? 10Robert B. Strimple, "What Does God Know?," in The Coming Evangelical Crisis, John H. Armstrong, gen. ed. (Chicago: Moody, 1996) 144, writes, "Thc role of the God of free-will theism thus seems to be reduced to that of a well-meaning but essentially powerless grandparent, who desires the best for his grandchildren but can do little to bring it about." See R. K. McGregor, No Place For Sovereignty: What's Wrong With Freewill Theism (Downers Grove, Ill.: InterVarsity, 1996) for a rigorous critique. The Impossibility of God of the Possible 207 to discredit the classic view and promote his own perspective. What Sort of Response Has Greeted God of the Possible? About the Errors and Flaws of This Book As might have been
surmised by now, this reviewer has no sympathies for the tenets of "openness" theology in
general, nor GP in particular. As evidenced above, this has also been the overall
evangelical response to Greg Boyd's Open view of God. The History of Orthodox Christian Doctrine Declares
11Francis J. Beckwith, "God Knows?," Christian Research
Journal 22/4 (2000):54-56. A. B. Caneday, "The Implausible God of Open Theism,"
Journal of Biblical Apologetics 1/1 (Fall 2000):66-87; John S. Hannnett, Faith &
Mission 18/1 (Fall 2000):136-40; Paul Kjoss Helseth, "On Divine Ambivalence: Open Theism
and the Problem of Particular Evils," JETS 44/3 (September 2001):493-51 1; Myron J.
Houghton, "An Evaluation of the 'Open' View of God: A Response to Gregory A. Boyd's God of
the Possible, unpublished revicw; R. Albert Mohler, Jr., "Does God Give Bad Advice?"
World 15/24 (June 17, 2000):23; Roger Nicole, "A Review Article: God of the Possible?,"
Reformation and Revival Journal 10/1 (Winter 2001):167-94. 208 The Master's Seminary Journal Most telling in Boyd's
treatment of doctrinal ancestry or precedent is his utter silence about the real historical forerunner
of modem-day openness theology-the 16th-century A.D. heresy of Socinianism,
which was popularly developed by Faustus Socinus (A.D. 1539-1604).14
14Boyd actually admits the connection of openness with Socinian thinking, while
back pedaling from the rest of Socinian heresy, in "The 'Open' View of the Future,"
www.opentheism.org /open view-of future_boyd.htm (2/16/2001):8-9. See Strimple, "What Does
God Know?" 151 n. 11, for further reading on Socinian theology. The Impossibility of God of the Possible 209 of the neo-orthodox persuasion tried to find some middle ground between liberalism and
evangelicalism by ridding each of its alleged worst extremes and incorporating its best into a new
view of orthodoxy, so neo-theists are attempting to find the middle ground between process
theology and classical theology with regard to the sovereignty and omniscience/foreknowledge of
God. By the very wording of GP's sub-title, "A Biblical Introduction to the Open View of God," Boyd attempts to persuade the reader that to be biblical on this topic is to follow his conclusion. Boyd recounts his three-year journey through Scripture which led him to embrace the Open view and concludes that it is "on the authority of God's Word" that the future is not exhaustively settled (8). He states, "I feel it is time to establish the biblical case . . ." (13). Less than fifteen pages into GP, Boyd has tried to convince the reader that his treatise is built on the Bible, the whole Bible, and nothing but the Bible. However, Boyd's development of the case for openness does not limit itself to Scripture. Even while claiming to be a thoroughgoing biblicist on this issue, Boyd makes some remarkably unguarded and revealing statements. "I will explain the philosophical basis and defense of this open view . . ." (8-9). "I happen to believe that the open view is the most philosophically compelling view available. . ." (12). Why bring philosophy into a discussion that is supposed to be uniquely theological? At the same time that Boyd claims to base his beliefs exclusively on Scripture, he accuses those who espouse the classical view as inheriting a pagan, philosophical perspective (24) that has been flawed by embracing a God shaped more by Plato (429-347 B.C.) or Aristotle (384-322 B.C.) than by Scripture (17, 85, 87, 115, 130-31). In this reviewer's opinion, the Open view is calling the Classic view false, when just the reverse is true. Francis Beckwith in his article has provided an adequate answer to this never proven, but frequently asserted, allegation.20 Openness theology is far more of a philosophical issue than a biblical one. David Basinger, a major Open view advocate and philosopher, has written, It is important to note that this debate is not, as some have implied, over whether God is omniscient (or fully omniscient). To say that God is omniscient is to say simply that God knows all that can be known. And those of us who deny that God has exhaustive knowledge of the future do not deny that God knows all that can be known. The debate 20Beckwith, "God Knows?," Christian Research Journal 54-55. 210 The Master's Seminary Journal is over what it is that can be known. That is, the debate is over what it means to say that God is omniscient.21Boyd, who has strong philosophical training and leanings, states categorically that, "The debate between open and classical understandings of divine foreknowledge is completely a debate over the nature of the future: . . . that is the question at hand, nothing else" (17 [emphasis in the original]). From these statements, it seems clear that Boyd's approach is primarily a philosophical one, not an exegetical one. It is based far more on the rationale of human thought than the revelation of divinely inspired truth. The question over the knowability of the future by God was imported to Scripture by philosophers, not extracted from the text by exegetes.22 Millard Erickson carefully notes concerning contemporary debates regarding the person of God, "[T]he issues on which controversy centers are not primarily exegetical in nature. Rather, they are largely philosophical, and much of the discussion is being carried on by philosophers."23 We would do well to take the warning of a past ETS president's remarks, concerning philosophy, to heart.24 And so would Greg Boyd. God of the Possible Deifies Man and Humanizes God I agree wholeheartedly with Millard Erickson that openness theology is an anthropocentric theology in which roles are reversed whereby God glorifies humans so that they can enjoy themselves forever.25 Openness theology treads dangerously close to fulfilling atheist Voltaire's (A.D. 1694-1778) oft-quoted observation, "If God made us in His image, we have certainly returned the compliment." A motto I saw recently could easily become the mantra of openness philosophers"The freedom to be yourself is the freedom to be your best." By the way, the motto was printed on a Southwest Airlines napkin, not in a theological journal. Bruce Ware's subtitle "The Diminished God of Open Theism" for God's Lesser Glory expresses this characteristic. However, to be fair, Greg Boyd should be allowed to express himself. I have discovered a new appreciation and excitement regarding my own responsibility
21David Basinger, "Can an Evangelical Christian Justifiably Deny God's Exhaustive
Knowledge of the Future?," Christian Scholars Review 25:2 (1995):133 [emphasis in the
original]. T'he Impossibility of God of the Possible 211 in bringing about the future (8).Boyd's overemphasis on the human at the expense of the divine borders on an "I'm the master of my fate, the captain of my soul" mindset. It involves "divine demotion" and "human promotion." There is no longer a vast, unmeasured gulf between the transcendent God and His human creation. Philosophically speaking, Open theists are attempting to level the playing field by bringing God down closer to man's level, and thereby giving the appearance that man has been elevated. Boyd teaches about a God who has backup Plan B and Plan C just to cover what man might do to confound His best Plan A (106). Rather than focusing on the ignorance and incompetence of man, openness focuses on the alleged ignorance and incompetence of God. A. B. Caneday picks up on this theme and shows just how disastrous it can be in redeeming the person of God [see his comments on the implication of footnote 2 (170) in the Introduction of GP (14)]. It becomes apparent that Boyd believes all analogical portrayals of God in terms of human characteristics (not form) should be taken literally in the sense that the analogy is not figurative but a portrayal of God as he actually is. On this basis, Boyd says that God is analogous to humans, which is to say that God is in the image of man rather than humans exist in the image of God (p. 170). This means that he believes God thinks, loves, acts justly, changes his mind, regrets, plans, and determines like humans do. This belief that God is analogous to humans is the taproot of Open Theism, for God's sovereign actions toward and relationships with his creatures are limited by the "free-will" of his creatures. That is why the designation "Free-will Theism" (open theists' self-designation) so well describes this system of belief concerning God. What is at stake for Boyd and other open theists is their passionate belief that humans must be absolutely self-determining or else they are not free in any sense. This belief concerning creatures determines Boyd's view of God.26Robert Strimple illustrates the fallacy of this humanistic Openness mindset with a "fish tale" that conveys accurate truth and which he first heard from Cornelius Van Til. In order to emphasize the sharp contrast between the popular contention that, if God were truly sovereign and ultimately in control, genuine human freedom would be destroyed, and the biblical perspective, a little fish story may be helpful. One day it occurred to this fish as he swam in the vast ocean with water all around him, on every side, that this water was hemming him in, cramping his style, limiting his freedom and his opportunity to fulfill the full potentialities of his "fishness." So he swam over near the shore, and he huffed and he puffed and he threw himself up on the beach. And he shouted out: "I'm26Caneday, "Implausible," Journal of Biblical Apologetics 69 [emphasis in the original]. 212 The Master's Seminary Journal free at last!" But you and I know what was really the case. Almost with that very shout he was not free but dead! The water all around him had not been limiting his freedom as a fish or making it impossible for him to fulfill all the potentialities of his rashness. On the contrary, that water was the very element in which he lived and moved and had his being as a fish. It was the necessary and perfect environment in which to fulfill his fishness.27Greg Boyd and his fellow Open view proponents are so driven by demanding human freedom at the expense of God's sovereign will and exhaustive foreknowledge that they, in effect, deify man and humanize God. That certainly did not come from the Scriptures, but the philosophizing of men. They fail in coming to grips with the Scriptural reality that God's sovereign will and man's responsible will are not mutually exclusive ideas, even though man cannot intellectually understand or reconcile how they logically relate to one another. God of the Possible Discards the Unknown, Mysterious Dimensions of God Oh, the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are His judgments and unfathomable His ways! For WHO HAS KNOWN THE MIND OF THE LORD, OR WHO BECAME HIS COUNSELOR? (Rom 11:33-34). 27Strimple, "What Does God Know?," in the Coming Evangelical Crisis 145. 28All Scripture citations in this article are from the New American Standard Bible. Boyd cites none of these passages in the Scripture Index (173-75). As an editorial note, on page 175 the heading "Revelation" needs to be added after 5:19 156 and before 1:1 50. The Impossibility of God of the Possible 213 them! If I should count them, they would outnumber the sand. When I awake, I am still with Thee (Ps 139:17-18).Openness advocates, so bent on philosophically and anthropocentrically finding closure in defining and explaining God, cannot properly handle the tensions that are presented in Scripture when the divine side and the human side are both presented side-by-side without any sense of contradiction or need of special explanation. For instance, take the inspiration of Scripture. All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for training in righteousness (2 Tim 3:16).Who wrote Romans? God the Father? God the Spirit? Paul? Or Tertius? The answer is "Yes!" There was a Divine side and a human side." Do we 29Read Clark Pinnock's struggle to reconcile these two aspects of Inspiration in such a way that the human side overshadows the Divine side; that decision then leads him to disparage the idea of inerrancy in The Scripture Principle (San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1964) 100-105. It is clear that Pinnock is too concerned with the human side and too little with the Divine. Randall and David Basinger also struggle with this tension in "Inerrancy, Dictation, and the Free Will Defense," EQ 55 (I 983):177-80. Nicole, "Review Article," Reformation and Revival Journal 180, recognizes how the principles of Boyd's openness view, when applied to the doctrine of Inspiration, would lead to a low, not a high, view of Scripture. Contra John S. Feinberg, No One Like Him (Wheaton, Ill.: Crossway, 2001). 214 The Master's Seminary Journal understand fully how it works? "No!" Do we accept it by faith? "Yes!" Do we believe that
God dictated all of Scripture, even though we know that He actually dictated some? "No!" Do
we believe the human authors could have exercised their own will and human acumen to override
what God intended to be written? "No"! Can we explain this with full satisfaction to the human
mind? "No!" Do we have to? "No!" We must live with the tension that God determined and man
participated in recording what Scripture itself calls "the Word of God," not the "Word of men'
(1 Thess 2:13).30 An Aberrant Methodology Develops in God of the Possible
30See Stephen J. Wellum's well reasoned article, "The Importance of the Nature of
Divine Sovereignty for Our View of Scripture," The Southern Baptist Journal of Theology
4/2 (Summer 2000):76-90. The Impossibility of God of the Possible 215 Second, Boyd
primarily engages in philosophical speculation. For instance, "God knows it [the future] as a
realm of possibilities, not certainties" (15). This conclusion did not result from a careful exegesis
of a biblical text(s). Therefore, it had to be imported to the text. Open theists affirm God's omniscience as emphatically as anybody does. The issue is not whether God's knowledge is perfect. It is. The issue is about the nature of the reality that God perfectly knows. More specifically, what is the content of the reality of the future? Whatever it is, we all agree that God perfectly knows it.... If God does not foreknow future free actions, it is not because his knowledge of the future is in any sense incomplete. It's because there is, in this view, nothing definite there for God to know! (16).One last Boydian speculation is offered to emphasize the point: "[F]ree actions do not exist to be known until free agents create them" (17). Third, the author employs non-exegetical exegesis. In other words, Boyd would have his reader believe that he has thoroughly tackled and subdued "the most explicit and compelling verses in the Bible pertaining to God's foreknowledge . . ." (29). When in fact, he has delivered little more than a once-over-lightly commentary. Take Isaiah 46:9-10, for example, as Exhibit A. One would expect pages of exegetical gems thoroughly disproving God's alleged exhaustive foreknowledge. However, one actually encounters a mere page (30) of questions rather than clarifications. For instance, "Does this imply that everything about the future is settled in God's mind?" (30). He fails to inform the reader that the opposite question also could and should be raised, "Does this imply that everything about the future is not settled in God's mind?" Boyd has definitely not begun to deal adequately with this majestic text. His cry of victory for an Open view here should be saved for after the battle, which he is still yet to enter. I offer, with no comment, Boyd's mere one-third of a page discussion of Isaiah 48:3-5 as Exhibit B of less-than-adequate biblical exposition. Finally, consider Boyd's considerable skill as a debater/illustrator. Far more frequently does Boyd resort to analogy than exegesis to make his point (see 17, 32, 43-44, 45-46, 47, 103-6, 107-11, 124, 127-28, 134, for example). His analogies involve everything from a monkey (17) to an Acura (124) to a chess master (127-28). Roger Nicole's treatment of the chess master comparison shows how impotent and prone to error "theology by analogy" really is. This, I submit, is a very infelicitous comparison for the following three reasons: (1) In chess both players start with a rigorously equal chance both as to the value of the pieces and the number of moves permitted. This would fit a Zoroastrian dualism rather than a theistic outlook; (2) The chess pieces are wholly devoid of a personal will. Thus the model lacks the very thing that Boyd meant to emphasize; (3) In the process of the game, the greatest chess masters have to concede the sacrifice and removal of some of 216 The Master's Seminary Journal their pieces: pawns, rooks, bishops, knights, even queen. It would be hard to condemn the attitude of one such sacrificed piece in hell saying, "I am now suffering the pain of damnation just to provide the Creator with the entertainment of a chess game!" 34God of the Possible Dismisses Anthropopathisms35 Anthropomorphism is a word used to describe figurative language which portrays God as having human characteristics, especially human form. Anthropopathism is a word specifically used to portray God figuratively as having human emotions and/or responses. These literary devices are used by God in Scripture to describe something about His divine "otherness" in a literary fashion that is a gracious accommodation to the ignorance of the human reader in regard to the person and character of God. Few today would argue for the literal physical characteristics that are figuratively used of God in Scripture (the Mormons excepted). Evangelicals would not take "hands" in Psalm 95:5 or "wings" in Psalm 91:4 to mean that God has actual, physical wings or hands. We understand that God is spirit (John 4:24) and that God is not a man (Num 23:19; 1 Sam 15:29). These anthropomorphisms are clearly understood as such. However, when it comes to God's emotions or responses, Open view advocates want to do just the opposite-treat them literally rather than figuratively. Why? Is it because God is no longer God and therefore emotes and responds like humans? Is it because God is now a man? Is it because God is now flesh, not spirit? "No" is the resounding answer to these questions. So we ask, "Based on what do we take God figuratively in the physical realm but literally in the emotive and responsive realm?" This reviewer proposes that it is because of a preconceived idea of openness that is imposed on the biblical text, a step without which openness would fail.36 Boyd goes to great lengths to make his point (11, 54 ff., 118-20) that when it comes to God's emotions and/or responses they are to be taken literally, not figuratively. However, there is nothing clear, suggestive, or compelling in the biblical text to warrant such an inconsistent conclusion. As a matter of fact, there are numerous defining texts that would forcefully argue otherwise. As is usually the case, Boyd has not included them in the Scripture Index (except James 1: 17, which he treats in passing on 136).
34Ibid., 184. The Impossibility of God of the Possible 217 The counsel of the LORD stands forever, the plans of His heart from generation to generation (Ps 33:11).God of the Possible Diminishes the Almighty's Deity Bruce Ware's God's Lesser Glory has proven to be an outstanding critique of openness theology in general and Boyd's GP in particular. The most compelling argument Ware makes in the entire volume deals with how the openness view seriously undermines the doctrine of the divine nature of God. He writes, Yahweh, the God of Israel, is known as the true and living God in contrast to idols, whose pretense to deity is evident on the basis that the true God knows and declares the future (including future free human actions) before it occurs, while those impostor rivals neither know nor declare any such thing. Consider the force of these passages.37Printed below are some of the passages Ware cites to make the point. Again, Boyd has altogether failed to take these highly relevant texts into consideration in GP, with the exception of his cursory comments on Isa 46:10 (25, 30) and Isa 48:3-5 (25, 30-31). Let them bring forth and declare to us what is going to take place; as for the former events, declare what they were, that we may consider them and know their outcome. Or announce to us what is coming; declare the things that are going to come afterward, that we may know that you are gods; indeed, do good or evil, that we may anxiously look about us and fear together (Isa 41:22-23). 37Ware, Lesser Glory 102 [emphasis in the original]. 218 The Master's Seminary Journal "Declare and set forth your case; indeed, let them consult together. Who has announced this from of old? Who has long since declared it? Is it not I, the LORD? And there is no other God besides Me, a righteous God and a Savior; there is none except Me" (Isa 45:21).Any theology that denies or diminishes the deity of God is one which is to be rejected. Such is the Open view. Undoubtedly that is why Socinius is known for denying Christ's deity and espousing an Open view of God, long before Greg Boyd. God of the Possible Downplays Determinative Biblical Texts Not one of the good promises which the LORD had made to the house of Israel failed; all came to pass (Josh 21:45; cf. 2 Cor 1:20). 38Steve Roy cites 2,323 predictive prophecies concerning future free human decisions or events that involve such free decisions in one way or another in the appendix of his unpublished dissertation, entitled "How Much Does God Foreknow? An Evangelical Assessment of the Doctrine of the Extent of the Foreknowledge of God in Light of the Teaching of Open Theism" (Ph.D. dissertation, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, Deerfield, Ill., 2001). The Impossibility of God of the Possible 219 Where then does wisdom come from? And where is the place of understanding? God understands its way; and He knows its place. For He looks to the ends of the earth, and sees everything under the heavens" (Job 28:12, 20, 23-24). 220 The Master's Seminary Journal creature hidden from His sight, but all things are open and laid bare to the eyes of Him with whom we have to do (Heb 4:12-13). About the Verdict on This Book39 Open Theism in
general and Greg Boyd's GP in particular have been taken "captive through philosophy
and empty deception, according to the tradition of men . . " (Col 2:8). This view of God, which is
not a mediating position between the classical view and the Arminian view of God's
foreknowledge, is rather an extreme view outside the acceptable and reasonable boundaries of
orthodoxy. GP focuses more on God's ignorance than it does on God's omniscience.
Thus, GP is found to be biblically deficient in its own defense and is to be rejected as a
heresy which measurably distorts the biblical portrayal of God as sovereign ruler over all. If "reformists" insist on keeping the boundaries of heresy open, however, then they must be resisted with charity. The fantasy that God is ignorant of the future is a heresy that must be rejected on scriptural grounds ("I make known the end from the beginning, from ancient times, what is still to come"; Isa. 46:10a; cf. Job 28; Ps. 90; Rom. 8:29; Eph. 1), as it has been in the history of exegesis of relevant passages. This issue was thoroughly discussed by patristic exegetes as early as Origen's Against Celsus. Keeping the boundaries of faith undefined is a demonic temptation that evangelicals within the mainline have learned all too well and have been burned by all too painfully.40
39For some, these conclusions may seem too strong because they are rather
forthright in their presentation. Let the reviewer say that I have purposely not commented upon
Dr. Boyd as a person but only his ideas. I have meant no harm or malice toward him, but rather I
passionately desire to protect the sheep, whom Christ purchased with his own shed blood, from a
doctrine that portrays a god of less glory than the God of Scripture (Acts 20:27-28). 1 am fearful
that if the author continues on the path of his current thinking, sooner or later, it will lead him to
more serious deviation from generally accepted Christian orthodoxy, such as denying one or both
of the doctrinal standards of the Evangelical Theological Society, i.e. the inerrancy of Scripture's
autographs and the triunity of God. Questions or comments about the article can be addressed to: The Master's Seminary 13248 Roscoe Boulevard Sun Valley, California 91352 E-mail for the author, Professor Richard L. Mayhue, can be directed to: DMayhue@tms.edu |
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