Is Open Theism a Type of Arminianism?
One of the reasons I
started this blog was to provide a place to talk about Arminian issues,
issues related to Arminian theology. (There is no “Arminian movement” as
such, so all talk about Arminianism is about theology.) One of those
questions is whether open theism, “openness of God” theology, is a
version of Arminianism. Does it belong under the umbrella category
“Arminian theology” or is it a “stand alone” theology vis-à-vis
Arminianism? Are they separate or should Arminianism be regarded as the
larger, broader doctrinal perspective and open theism a particular angle
on that perspective?
Generally speaking, open theists want to be
considered Arminians. Most of them were Arminians before becoming open
theists; they still consider themselves Arminians. (A few open theist
jumped right from some version of Reformed theology into open theism.)
Generally
speaking, non-open theist Arminians do not want to include open theists
among their ranks or treat open theism as a variation of Arminianism.
I
think there are political reasons for that. Among evangelicals, anyway,
Arminianism has long been accepted as a respectable tradition even by
most Reformed evangelicals who strongly disagree with it. Arminians were
among the founders of the National Association of Evangelicals. Who can
seriously doubt that John Wesley should be considered evangelical? Yes,
of course, there are those Calvinists and Lutherans who would like to
own the label “evangelical” and exclude Arminians, but that’s not widely
accepted by the movers and shakers of evangelicalism. If open theism
can be considered Arminian, that gives open theists more of a voice, a
place at the table, among evangelicals. Continue at Roger Olson
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