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Beyond the Bounds: Open Theism and the Undermining of Biblical Christianity
John Piper (Editor), Justin Taylor (Editor), Paul Kjoss Helseth (Editor), Russell Fuller, Chad Owen Brand, Mark Talbot, William C. Davis, A. B. Caneday, Michael S. Horton, Stephen J. Wellum, Bruce A. Ware, Wayne GrudemPrice: $17.99 (Trade Paperback)
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Open theism--denying God's knowledge of the future--is an attempt to change the way Christians think about God and is a growing challenge to orthodox belief. In this book, twelve pastors and teachers explain why the God of open theism is not the God of biblical Christianity. They probe the biblical, historical, and philosophical context, language, and interpretation of the debate, giving readers an understanding of what is at stake when exhaustive divine foreknowledge is denied.
Product Details
- ISBN-10: 1581344627
- ISBN-13: 9781581344622
- Format: Trade Paperback
- Pages: 416
- Size: 5.5 x 8.5 inches
- Published: Jan 30, 2003
More Information
- Description
- Contents
- Excerpt: Contributors, Foreword, and Introduction - 97K PDF
- Excerpt: Chapter 1: The Rabbis and the Claims of Openness Advocates (Russell Fuller) - 111K PDF
- Index - 63K PDF
- Back Cover
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Description
"Everyone who believes in God at all believes that He knows what you and
I are going to do tomorrow."
--C. S. Lewis
This understanding of God’s foreknowledge has united the church for twenty centuries. But advocates of "open theism" are presenting a different vision of God and a different view of the future.
The rise of open theism within evangelicalism has raised a host of questions. Was classical theism decisively tainted by Greek philosophy? How should we understand passages that tell us that God repents? Are essentials of biblical Christianity--like the inerrancy of Scripture, the trustworthiness of God, and the Gospel of Christ--at stake in this debate? Where, when, and why should we draw new boundaries--and is open theism beyond them? Beyond the Bounds brings together a respected team of scholars to examine the latest literature, address these questions, and give guidance to the church in this time of controversy.
Contributors include:
- John Piper
- Wayne Grudem
- Michael S. Horton
- Bruce A. Ware
- Mark R. Talbot
- A. B. Caneday
- Stephen J. Wellum
- Justin Taylor
- Paul Kjoss Helseth
- Chad Brand
- William C. Davis
- Russell Fuller
"We have prepared this book to address the issue of boundaries and, we
pray, bring some remedy to the present and impending pain of embracing open
theism as a legitimate Christian vision of God. . . . As a pastor, who longs
to be biblical and God-centered and Christ-exalting and eternally helpful to
my people, I see open theism as theologically ruinous, dishonoring to God, belittling
to Christ, and pastorally hurtful. My prayer is that Christian leaders will
come to see it this way, and thus love the church by counting open theism beyond
the bounds of orthodox Christian teaching."
--From the Foreword by John Piper
"The
downsized deity of open theism is a poor substitute for the real God of historic
Christianity—as taught by Protestant, Catholic, and Orthodox
theologians through the centuries. This book offers an important analysis and
critique of this sub-Christian view of God. Well researched and fairly presented."
--Dr. Timothy George
Dean of Beeson Divinity School, Samford University and an executive editor
of Christianity Today
"Here is a weighty tract for the times, in which a dozen Reformed scholars
survey the "open theism" of Pinnock, Sanders, Boyd, and colleagues,
and find it a confused, confusing, and unedifying hypothesis that ought to
be declared off limits. Some pages are heavy sledding, but the arguing is clear
and strong, and the book is essential reading for all who are caught up in
this discussion."
--Dr. J. I. Packer
Professor of Theology
Regent College
About the Contributors
ECPA Gold Medallion winner John Piper is senior pastor of Bethlehem Baptist Church in Minneapolis and the head of Desiring God. He has written numerous books on topics that include personal holiness, missions and historical figures.
Justin Taylor is Study Bible project director and associate publisher at Crossway. He has edited and contributed to several books, including A God-Entranced Vision of All Things and Reclaiming the Center. He runs the website www.johnowen.org.
Paul Kjoss Helseth is Associate Professor of Christian Thought at Northwestern College in St. Paul, Minnesota and the author of numerous scholarly articles.
Dr. Wayne Grudem is a graduate of Harvard, Westminster Theological Seminary, and the University of Cambridge, England. He is the former president of the Council on Biblical Manhood and Womanhood and is Research Professor of Bible and Theology at Phoenix Seminary.
