Yes. we need experience because true faith comes by knowing God. How do you think Jesus was able to perform so many miracles? It was because He knew His Father so well. Remember, He said I of my own self can do nothing. What my Father tells me to do I do. I also know by personal experience what God is capable of doing.
Let me tell you a story from my past that will help you to understand. I got rebaptised in the mid 70s because God inserted Himself into my life. I had to have that happen as I was so burnt out from trying to destroy my mind with psychedelic drugs, speed, downers. and pot I was incapable of holding down a job. Why destroy my mind? Because by the time I graduated from high school the emotional pain of being hated by my entire family was more than I could bear. During those years of destroying myself I had asked the devil to work out a situation for me and if he did I was his.
To make a long story short I got rebaptised because I learned for the first time in my life in my life that someone loved me. Me, the guy whose entire family loved to hate and bully, was loved by the God of the universe. Their behavior taught me to accept bullying from anyone because I thought I was worthless. I could see no value in myself because my family could see no value in me. So I finally started to see at least some value in myself and the love of God drew me like a magnet. I had to get to know someone who loved this worthless person.
One night after I had been rebaptised I was lying in my bed watching the clouds roll by under a full moon. The next thing I knew I was no longer in bed. I was in this long narrow room with a bunch of robed hooded people facing away from me on either side of a really long table. At the other end of the table there another hooded guy facing away from me looking into a massive river rock fireplace. He turned around and looked me in the eye, crooked his index finger at me, and said, your mine, your mine. I levitated and began floating across the table to him. I got right up to him before I realized who it was. I yelled, no, and suddenly I was lying on my bed again. I was covered with goose bumps. and scared out of my mind. I rolled over onto my stomach and began asking God for His protection and telling Him he needed to help me because I could not help myself.
There was a terrific struggle going on on top of me. I could feel warm and cold wings touching me as those two angels rolled over and over physically fighting over me. I have no idea how long that fight lasted but it eventually it stopped and I drifted off to sleep. The devil didn't give up though. He came back on other full moon nights. On one of them I was driving down the road and suddenly I was covered in goose bumps and my dog who had been lying on the seat beside me got up and began turning around and around growling. He did not like the devil. I began praying once again and after a short while the goose bumps went away and my dog laid back down. His harassment didn't stop there. He began hitting me with depression. I'd be driving down the road and I'd suddenly be so depressed I'd think about parking my car on the railroad tracks so a train would come along and kill me. More than a decade later I'd be working driving from one town to another and suddenly I'd be so depressed I'd have tears rolling down my face. I'd start praying and tell the Lord I couldn't fight this on my own and a few miles later I'd find myself sing hymns and I'd thank Him for His miracle.
There have been so many miracles in my life I'd be sure to forget some if I tried to recall them all. My life has been one of intense spiritual struggle since I was a little kid and it has resulted in me having a trust in God like very few people ever have. So, yes, I'd say experience with God is extremely important in getting to know Him.
Jesus tells us that this is life eternal that they should know you the only true God and Jesus Christ who thou hast sent in John 17:3; Salvation is relational, not theological, because it is based on knowing God.
But none of that tells you information about the subject of this thread. We don't decide our theology from our experiences.
Speaking of this thread, the topic is regarding a
definition of open theism, not a defense, though a defense was necessary, imo.
This is from the OP:
But what about the one above that admits "God allows humans to make free choices that affect the future"? I suspect almost everyone here would agree with the idea that choices do affect the future -
I think you and I, Gary, agree with BobRyan on that part.
yet God most certainly knows exactly what will happen without any doubt, confusion etc on His part.
And we reached an agreement that this is not a true statement, "God knows everything about the future", because that leads to one of two types of determinism (which I've labelled "Calvinism" and "Arminianism"), neither of which allows for humans to actually make their own choices.
In other words, God's knowing everything we will do before we exist means all is determined without our participation in the determining, which means we don't make our own choices
In any case when I hear that term used I think of the negative side of it and reject it. However is it possible some are using it in a way that does not include that sort of negative constraint?
Here's why Open Theism has a hard time...everyone considers God to have some innate knowledge of the future, but such is not supported by the bible. The bible tells us that God knows us because He observes us in various ways, not because He just innately knows us. The former is about relationship, which you, Gary, stress as so very important. The latter is purely about a preconception of God. Both of these are experienced. We "experience" our preconceptions every time we use them to override scripture.
But experiences aren't reliable for deciphering what God is like--they might help in some areas, but not in knowing how much of the future God might know or not know. We must resort to His revealed word. And if there are ANY passages, even just one, where the future changed, then we have our answer.
There is at least one, and it is clear that the future changed. It is with Hezekiah and his illness. God sends Isaiah to him twice in the same day with two opposing messages:
1. That Hez will die of his illness, and
2. That Hez will survive his illness and live an extra 15 years.
Both of these messages are about the future for Hez. Both are from God. Both cannot be true if the future of Hez was settled before he existed.
Therefore, if God did not lie to Hez in the first message about his future, then the future changed between the first and the second message.