The Open View of the future recognizes the vast influence of all the angelic
and human wills God created, which, in turn, influences the various outcomes and
circumstances in life. Therefore life is arbitrary because of the way the
decisions made by an unfathomably vast multitude of free agents intersect with
each other. Life is not function of God’s will or character. (Click here for a post on this topic.)
This leads, though, to an extremely important and practical question: What
role does God play in all of this? What influence does God have in determining
what comes to pass? Yes, he has an important role to play in anticipating and
creatively responding to decisions agents make. But is God only a responder? If
the blueprint model errs in ascribing the ultimate reason for everything to God,
it might seem that the open view or warfare model errs in not ascribing the
ultimate reason for anything to God.
The question is extremely important on a number of accounts, not least of
which is that Christianity is founded on the assumption that God can and does
unilaterally intervene in the affairs of humans. The biblical portrait of God is
of one who responds to events. He is a God who at times supernaturally
intervenes to alter the course of history and of individual lives.
Take Jesus Christ as our starting point, we can’t avoid concluding that God
intervenes in the world. Indeed, Jesus is the supreme instance of God
intervening in human affairs. In Christ God became a human! If that doesn’t
constitute supernatural intervention, nothing does! As God in human form, Christ
himself is the decisive refutation of any theology that brackets off the
influence of God from the cosmos.
Christ’s ministry was centered on demonstrating God’s supernatural power in
counteracting the tragic effects of the kingdom of darkness. He announced the
kingdom of God was at hand and proved it by supernaturally healing and
delivering people from demonic oppression. And he taught us to pray that his
Father’s will be done “on earth as it is in heaven.” The rest of the biblical
narrative concurs with this perspective, for it is woven around miracles that
God performed on behalf of his people, often in response to prayer. From the
parting of the Red Sea to the miracles of the early church, the Bible witnesses
to a miracle-working God.
From a Christ-centered, biblical perspective, God’s ability to break into
history is the foundation of our confidence in him. If God can part the Red Sea,
become a human being, die on a cross and rise from the dead, then we can trust
him to intervene and redeem today’s tragic circumstances. Even more
fundamentally, we can trust that he will someday vanquish all his foes once and
for all, bring this present age to a close, and set up a kingdom of love that
will never end. We are confident that things will not always go on as they are
precisely because God is not bound to the natural processes.
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