Amos 7:1-6
"The Lord changed His mind about this."
"Thus the Lord God showed me, and
behold, He was forming a locust-swarm when the spring crop began to
sprout. And behold, the spring crop was after the king’s mowing.
2And it came about, when it had finished eating the
vegetation of the land, that I said, “Lord God, please pardon! How
can Jacob stand, for he is small?” 3The Lord changed His
mind about this. “It shall not be,” said the Lord.
4Thus the Lord God showed me, and behold, the Lord God
was calling to contend with them by fire, and it consumed the great
deep and began to consume the farm land. Then I said, 5“Lord
God, please stop! How can Jacob stand, for he is small?” 6The
Lord changed His mind about this. “This too shall not be,” said the
Lord God," (Amos 7:1-6).
In Amos 7:3, The KJV, ASV, and RSV say, "The Lord repented." The
NKJV, NIV, and ESV say, "The Lord relented." The NASB says "The
Lord changed His mind."
In Amos 7:6, "KJV, ASV, RSV, "The Lord repented."
NIV, NKJV, ESV "Relented" NASB, "The Lord changed His mind."
We see where
the Lord "changes His mind," after someone intercedes, after someone
prays and asks for mercy. The issue, of course, is whether or not God
actually goes through a process of changing His mind due to learning
something as the open theists would maintain or whether God is simply
speaking to us relative to our reference of time where events happen in
sequence. Is God actually reacting to new information or is He
working on our level, in our reference, for our benefit as He speaks to
us in a sequence of events designed to bring us to repentance and to
listen to the intercession of others?
These verses, where God seems to repent, to relent, and
to change His mind, can also be legitimately interpreted to mean that
God is working with in our timeframe, reacting to our prayers, our
intercession, and our repentance. From all eternity God knew who would
repent when and for what reasons. From all eternity God has incorporated
the choices of His people into the fabric of His divine and sovereign
plan. This includes the individual prayers and acts of repentance which
then seem to influence God and appear to change His course of action.
But this is exactly what you would expect if God was working with people
who are limited to an existence inside of time. You would naturally
expect that God would speak to us about repentance, that we would
repent, and then God would apparently appear to change in response to
repentance -- even though He knew it would happen from all eternity.
This is the wondrous majesty of God's ability to know all things as well
as work with his creation.
The open theists may attempt to claim that such verses
mean that God is actually learning and reacting to people as if God
really is changing His mind and adapting. But this would mean that
God is ignorant of many things, that He makes mistakes, that He learns,
that He takes risks, and that people can thwart His plans. I see no
comfort in trusting a God who can make mistakes and who is not in
control.
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