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Cosmic
Chess
By Winkie
Pratney
Imagine a gigantic game of chess. Each player has a
purpose--to win as many men as possible from the other side, and
to ultimately dethrone the other King. This factor is the
determining motive behind every move they make. Based on this
purpose, each player creates a plan. It may be far-reaching as
in the case of the chess genius, but it is a plan based on
certain probabilities, not absolute certainties. As one opposing
player makes his moves, he creates new possibilities and
probabilities. His opponent makes choices according to his
knowledge and vision of the other player's personality, behavior
under certain conditions and probable replies to his attack.
Notice that the PLAN changes constantly, as swiftly and as often
as the opponent creates new threats to the king's safety.
Suppose God works like this! Add the variation of over five
billion "chess men" that constantly increase in number
on the "board" of Earth- grant the additional
difficulty of giving to each "chessman" a certain
limited number of moves he or she is able to make all by himself
or herself-pit the wisdom of ages against each other in the
"combat" experience of the two "players" and
you have an idea of the most exciting combat of all time...the
battle between God and Satan for the minds and destinies of men!
This chess analogy is a helpful one. The power of a chess
piece is determined in two ways: (l) the number of moves it is
able to make on the board, and the extent of its ability to be
moved around the board; (2) The relative place it occupies in
the battle-field of the chess-board. For example, a Queen is
powerful because of her deployment and freedom; but a lowly pawn
in the right place can be just as effective, if not more so.
Even the most powerful piece is useless unless it can be placed
in the right area at the right time. And even the lowliest pawn
can become any other piece on the board if it makes it to the
other side of the board. There are many difficult questions of
faith that can be answered by such an analogy, tied in with the
following theory of the Divine foreknowledge of God.
As with any theoretical examination in theology, this is
subject to three essential tests of its validity, should it not
meet with these it does not deserve a place in the thoughts of
lovers of Holy Scripture and the loving God they declare. These
tests for reality are:
- Is it expressed, specifically taught or at least implied
RIGHT THROUGH Scripture?
- Is it practical, internally consistent with other truths,
reasonable and spiritually exciting?
- Does it bring me closer to the Lord Jesus and challenge me
to love Him more, appreciate more fully His power, wisdom,
goodness, justice, mercy and love, and serve Him better?
It is taken as a first truth for any serious and honest Bible
student that Scripture is given by God, divinely inspired and
the final objective authority in all matters of faith and
Christian doctrine; also that prayerful, candid consideration of
revealed facts will lead us, heart and mind, into an
understanding of God's will and purpose so far as it concerns
our lives. We are Divinely commanded: "PROVE all things;
hold fast to that which is good" ( Thess. 5:21)
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| THE
LINE OF TIME AND GOD |
Consider--a line representing eternity, stretching into
infinity on both ends. If we assume God's infinity, we must also
assume that time has no meaning on this line as far as God is
concerned. Since God is the Author of all things outside of His
own self-existence, all things He created are now known to Him
anywhere on this line. We label the "ends" of this
line respectively "A" and "B".
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give meaning to the word "Time" we place on
this line the mark "X". |
Now we can say that anything behind "X" (A-X) is
PAST (relative to X), anything on "X" is PRESENT,
anything ahead of "X" (X-B) is FUTURE. We shall think
of time only as it relates here to man in limited existence.
Assuming God knows everything on our limited
"time-line" (because He must know all things He
created on it, giving us "time") and He therefore now
knows all that has, is and will occur, logic gives us these
conclusions:
- God can have no new thoughts, because this would imply new
facts He did not know before;
- God can have no new feelings, because this implies new
experiences He has not had before;
- God can make no new decisions, because this implies new
choices not made before; (?!)
- God makes no single decision after or before any other;
i.e. there is no succession of thought, experience or choice
in the Being of God, (??!)
- God has never really created or begun anything! If
everything conceivable existed with Him from all eternity,
His own will is not free, and He has not originated
anything! (???)
But these assumptions are not only ridiculous but totally
UN-SCRIPTURAL. The Bible plainly states that God DOES have new
thoughts, feelings, experiences and decisions to make in regard
to His dealings with men. Consider the following passage in
contrast:
"And God SAW that the wickedness of men was great...and
it REPENTED (nacham--to be penitent, receive comfort from hurt
by a change of mind) the Lord that He had made man on the earth
and it GRIEVED (atsab--to grieve self) Him at His heart"
(Gen. 6:5-6).
The question that naturally arises is this: if God foreknew
men's wickedness and knew for sure that they would do this, and
AS FAR AS HE IS CONCERNED, THEY HAD already done it, why this
verse? Let us proceed, however, before developing a possible
answer.
"And the LORD said I WILL DESTROY man whom I have
created, both man and beast [from man to beast] and the creeping
thing and the fowls of the air for it REPENTETH Me that I have
made them." Notice the choice here: man "will" be
destroyed! Yet here you are, reading this paper that another man
has written! The second question asked is:
If God had foreknown man's evil as a certainty, why does He
say, "I WILL destroy them FOR it repenteth Me that I have
made them"? Either He did not MEAN what He said when He
said it (and that has blasphemous implications--that God in the
very least puts on a "show" for the benefit of man, by
saying He is grieved or glad when He is actually neither, but
simply saying it so that man will think He is)--or somehow, some
way, God changed His mind!! And not only did He change it once,
but if this is true, He changed it again after vs.71
A
Theological Super-Puzzle
Go back to the time-line. Check the logic for flaws. Granted
the assumptions made, all should follow--and yet the conclusions
reached do not fit with the facts of either reason or
revelation! A complete, condensed summary of all relevant
Scriptures is given at the end of this tract; overwhelming
evidence contravening these conclusions concerning God's
inability to change His mind, feel new feelings and have new
thoughts is obvious. Yet, from the very assumptions made, these
conclusions must follow: if God created all things, then He
already knows about them; nothing He creates is new to Him, and
therefore He CANNOT have what Scripture says He has-- new
thoughts, new feelings, new choices--UNLESS--something happens
on that time-line that God did NOT create!
Is it possible for something to exist that God did not
create? Can any other being in the Universe create anything
outside of the direct, ultimate creation of God? If it is true
that God must necessarily be the Author of everything that
exists in the Universe. then we are faced with an even more
embarrassing question: "Then who created SIN?"
The following questions are just a sample of the highly
embarrassing problems that follow the assumption that God is the
direct Author of all in the Universe, and ultimately he is the
One responsible for everything that has, is or will happen:
- Did God foreknow the Devil would sin? If so, why did He
make him?
- If God knew the Devil would sin, why was no atonement made
for Satan?
- If God knows what men will choose, why does He
"strive" and plead with them?
- If past, present and future are the same to God, how can
He "forget" our sin?
- If the future of man is already certain, why isn't it
fixed? How can we change it?
- If man's future destiny is already certain, why should we
bother to witness at all?
- If God already knows what I am going to do, why does He
give me a choice at all?
- If God already knows what I want and am going to say, why
should I "ask" in prayer?
- If God created everything, why isn't He responsible for
all moral and physical evil?
When faced with such questions, it will do no good for us to
evade them, or show intellectual dishonesty by saying glibly,
"That is something we cannot know; it is beyond our
understanding." If it relates to life, and God's own
character, the Bible must have something to say about it. There
are many things beyond our wisdom, but they are not things which
are necessary for coming to grips with the problems of life and
the questions of sinners. God is certainly not unreasonable in
His approach to man; He challenges, "Come let us REASON
together" to the sinner, and if His salvation and rulership
are not reasonable this verse and others mean nothing more than
a play on words. Let us face this issue honestly and openly,
asking God for the light of the Holy Spirit to "give a
reason for the hope that is within us in meekness and fear"
(I Pet. 3:15). And the vast majority of such questions can be
resolved without linguistic subterfuge if one simple assumption
is made: that the CHOICE any free moral-agent makes is a truly
CREATIVE act. Before it is made it does not exist at all; the
moment it is made, it comes into existence as a brand-new factor
in the Universe. This covers the choices of all moral
beings--those of the devil and his dark angels, the angels which
did not sin, man, both saint and sinner--and of course God
Himself. This allows the possibility of growth and freedom to
make or create without coercion or limitation other than that
imposed by the natural or moral attributes of being and
character.
Why
Assume Absolute Foreknowledge?
If we assume that choices are creative and cannot be
foreknown with certainty, although they can be predicted with
high probability (based on already-known factors and choices
made previously by moral beings) a great amount of conflict is
removed from theology. This offers an explanation that is both
sensible and scriptural that does not need complex argumentation
to substantiate. Truth may be profound, but it is always simple.
Therefore, absolute foreknowledge may be questioned because:
- It is unnecessary for God's rule over free moral agents;
- Its assumptions bring direct contradiction in Scriptures
and facts of life;
- It is needless to assume it in establishing a true and
consistent theology;
- Trying to defend its resultant absurdities brings needless
waste of time and talents;
- Every pulpit in Christendom assumes the future is not
fixed in the nature of life, in the plans of the Universe
and in the mind of God, for all practical purposes in
preaching;
- Every witnessing Christian must necessarily assume that
his witness is needed. because the destiny of the sinner he
is talking to is not fixed and certain (Ezek. 3:17-21;
18:23-32).
- The church in her every effort, whether missionary,
intercessory, evangelistic, didactic or social enterprises
and outreaches, assumes there are no fixed certainties for
human future other than those of prophecy or promise,
warning or judgment that God has set forth in His Word,
based on intentions of the Godhead or man's responses to His
conditions.
It is certainly unreasonable to ask a thinking man to believe
in absolute foreknowledge without giving a single direct text of
scripture to teach it, a single proof of its reality, an
argument for its necessity, a reason for it suggested in the
operation of necessary thought, or even a single principle of
faith that requires its admission! It is time we devoted
careful, open-minded study to the assumed premise of God's
absolute foreknowledge, including man's moral choices.
Possible
Objections
Although no direct teachings against this theory have been
found in Scripture, and no serious objections have been raised,
a number may possibly occur to the reader who applies himself to
a study of these considerations. Should this line of study
suggest an even better theory to the reader, or modifications
that may far better explain some questions this theory may raise
in the inquirer's mind, correspondence is invited, that further
revision or even replacement can be initiated. True Christian
consistency does not mean stubborn adherence to limited Bible
light, but the willingness to revise our ideas and attitudes and
practices as fast as we learn more from the hand of God. Finite
minds, unless asleep or drugged by prejudice, must advance in
knowledge; the fear of revision of views in conformity to
increasing light would at best keep the world at a perpetual
stand-still in all areas of discovery. We should hold ourselves
sacredly bound to subject all our respective positions to
thorough and most intensive discussion, and hold and treat them
as the opinions of anyone else; with no cause to change, to hold
them fast; but if flawed, to amend or reject any one.
Should the reader discover any such objections, it is to be
hoped that he will seriously and candidly weigh these against
the appalling difficulties of the position this theory
controverts. In the study of this line of thought, ideas may be
met that tax our scholarship and worry our powers of
comprehension; but we shall meet many more, and those of a most
embarrassing and indefensible character, with the other. Glib
answers based on rote memorization and parroted quotation will
not satisfy an incisively questioning generation of young
skeptics without a Savior. Since the Bible is our authority, a
digested list of pertinent Passages on both sides of the
controverted question is given here. This is only a skeleton
list of all the most important passages; a complete study
covering all Bible passages may be later made available for the
benefit of the serious student who wishes to pursue the subject
further.
(A) Passages of Scripture requiring a DENIAL of the supposed
fact that all future choices of God and man are now known to God
and have been so known from all eternity:
Gen.
2:17(1:5; 5:5), 6:5-7; (1:31);18:20-21, 22-33; 22:1, 12; Ex.
16:4; 32:7-14, 30-35; 33:5; Num. 11:1;14:11-24;14:27-35;
16:2-33; 16:44-48; Deut. 8:2; 9:13-14; 18:19; 20:25-29;
(10:10)13:1-3; Judges 2:18, 20-22 (3:4); 10:13-16; 1 Sam. 2:30
(5:12-14); 13:1-3; 13:14-15 15:11,23; 15:26, 35 (28:18, 8:4-9,
22; 12:13-19); 2 Sam. 7:10-11;12:22 (14); 24:12--16, (1,25); 1
Kings 9:3, 4-9; 11:11-13; 21:27, 29; (21-22); 2 Kings 20:1-7;
23:26-27, (1 Kings 9:3) 1 Chron. 17:9-10;1 Chron. 21:7-14, 15
(1) (2 Sam. 24:1); 2 Chron. 7:16; 12:5-8; 32:31; Job 2:3; Ps.
14:2; (53:2) Ps. 78:21-22; 58:61; 106:23; 106:44-45; Isaiah
5:3-7; Is. 5:1-8; Is. 38:1-5, (2 Kings 20:1-7); Jer. 3:6-8;
18:7-10; 26:2-3; Jer. 4-6, 12-13, 18-19; Ezek. 12:1-3; 20:8-9;
13-14, 15-17; Ezek. 21-22; 22:30; 24:14, Hosea 8:5; Joel
2:12-14; Amos. 5:14-15; 7:1-3, 4-6; Jonah 1:2; 3:2, 4-10; 4:2;
Zech. 8:14-15; Matt. 10:2-4; (Mk. 3:13-19) (cf. Lk. 6:12-16)
19:28; Mark 13:32; (Matt. 24:36 Acts 1:7:1; Cor. 11:3); 3 14-15,
19- 6:7, 11-12; 14:10, 43; 15:34; Luke 6:12, 13, 16 (7:39); 8:1;
9:1-2, 5-6 (10:20); 18:31; 22:3-6, 48; Jn. 6:70; 12:4-6;
13:2,15:16; Rev. 3:5; 17-8 (13:8; 20:12,15,21,27)21:18-19; Acts
15:7).
(B) Passages of Scripture that can be found to SUPPORT the
idea of God's absolute foreknowledge, in the greater part
prophecies of what God has determined to bring to pass in His
guidance of world affairs. (see discussion of prediction in
questions section.)
Gen.
15:13-15; 16:12; 17:20- 25:23; Num. 23:19; Deut. 31:16-21, 29
(21, 27); 1 Sam. 15:29; 1 Kings 13:2 (2 Kings 22:1,23, 15--16);
Ps. 22:l6, 18; 69:21; Is. 44:28-45; 46:9-11; 52:13-15; 53:1-12:
Jer. 1:5; 25:11, 12; 29:1-14; Zech. 12:10; Mal. 3:6; Matt.
16:21; 20:17-19; 21:1-5; 24:1-25,46; 26:31-34; 27:9; Mark 9:31;
14:13-16; Luke 24:25-27; 44:47; John 6:64; 70-71; 12:32-34;
13:11, 18-19, 21, 26; 17:12; 19:24, 28, 36, 37; 21:l8-19; Acts
2:23; 13:29; Rom. 8:28-30; 11:2, 5-11; 2 Thess. 2:3-4,13;1 Tim.
4:1-3; 2 Tim. 1:9-10; 1 Pet. 1:1-2, 20; Rev. 1:1, 7; 2:10; 4.1;
6:11- 7:4-8, 9,14; 9:20-21 (16:9, 11); 11:2, 12-13; 12:6, 7-9;
13:1-7, 8, 11-18; 14:20; 17:7, 8, 12, 19:19-21, 20:7-8, 9-10
(22:B).
Questions
Regarding This Theory
Various objections have occurred in the initial discussions
concerning this theory. The four most common are as follows;
further discussion is invited concerning this:
It is objected that if God does not foreknow choices He
cannot be said to be omniscient.
Omniscience (All-knowledge) is not a Bible term. It is
theological and its definition must be founded on Bible
statements and objective evidence, not human assumption. If
defined as "knowing everything" without qualification
we run into some indefensible questions like-- If God has all
power and knows everything why can't He think up a problem so
big He can t solve it?" The answer lies in defining
Scripturally "all-power" and
"all-knowledge", just as omniscience does NOT mean
that God can do things which are inherently contradictory (such
as make black the direct opposite of and exact duplicate of
white at the same time) or things which are morally unwise, so
omniscience may be defined as knowing all that is knowable, or
knowing all things which are objects of knowledge. If a future
choice does not actually exist until it is made, it in no way
limits God's omniscience for this not to be known, it is not
really "there" yet to be known! God's all-knowledge
can be defined to cover all existing objects of knowledge and
all probabilities where moral choices are concerned; this is not
at all limiting.
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