Contemporary open theists have named precursors among philosophers to document their assertion that "the open view of the future is not a recent concept," but has a long history. The first known post-biblical Christian writings advocating concepts similar to open theism with regard to the issue of foreknowledge are found in the writings of
Calcidius, a 4th-century interpreter of
Plato. It was affirmed in the 16th century by
Socinus, and in the early 18th century by
Samuel Fancourt and by Andrew Ramsay (an important figure in Methodism). In the 19th century several theologians wrote in defense of this idea, including
Isaak August Dorner,
Gustav Fechner,
Otto Pfleiderer,
Jules Lequier,
Adam Clarke, Billy Hibbard, Joel Hayes, T.W. Brents, and Lorenzo D. McCabe. Contributions to this defense increased as the century drew to a close. The dynamic omniscience view has been affirmed by a number of non Christians as well: Cicero (1st century BC) Alexander of Aphrodisias (2nd century) and Porphyry (3rd century). God's statement to Abraham “Now I know that you fear me” (Gen 22:12) was much discussed by Medieval Jewish theologians. Two significant Jewish thinkers who affirmed dynamic omniscience as the proper interpretation of the passage were Ibn Ezra (12th century) and Gersonides (14th century).
Sergei Bulgakov, an early-20th-century Russian Orthodox priest and theologian advocated the use of the term
panentheism, which articulated a necessary link between God and creation as consequence of God's free love and not as a natural necessity. His
sophiology has sometimes been seen as a precursor to 'open theism'. David R. Larson claimed in 2007 that "in less detailed forms the basics of 'Open Theism' have been taught at
Loma Linda University for about fifty years, beginning at least as early as long-time professor
Jack W. Provonsha." Provonsha started teaching at Loma Linda about 1960.
Millard Erickson belittles such precursors to open theism as "virtually unknown or unnoticed."
After 1980 The term "open theism" was introduced in 1980 with theologian
Richard Rice's book
The Openness of God: The Relationship of Divine Foreknowledge and Human Free Will. The broader articulation of open theism was given in 1994, when five essays were published by evangelical scholars (including Rice) under the title
The Openness of God. Recent theologians of note expressing this view include:
Clark Pinnock (deceased as of 2010),
Greg Boyd,
Thomas Jay Oord,
John E. Sanders,
Dallas Willard,
Jürgen Moltmann,
Richard Rice,
C. Peter Wagner,
John Polkinghorne,
Hendrikus Berkhof, Adrio Konig, Harry Boer, Bethany Sollereder, Matt Parkins, Thomas Finger (Mennonite), W. Norris Clarke (Roman Catholic), Brian Hebblethwaite, Robert Ellis, Kenneth Archer (Pentecostal), Barry Callen (Church of God), Henry Knight III, Gordon Olson, and
Winkie Pratney. A significant, growing number of philosophers of religion affirm it:
Peter Van Inwagen,
Richard Swinburne (
Eastern Orthodox),
William Hasker,
David Basinger,
Nicholas Wolterstorff,
Dean Zimmerman, Timothy O'Connor, Blake Ostler, James D. Rissler, Keith DeRose, Richard E. Creel, Robin Collins (philosopher/theologian/physicist),
J. R. Lucas,
Vincent Brümmer, (
Roman Catholic),
Richard Purtill, Alan Rhoda, Jeffrey Koperski, Dale Tuggy, and
Keith Ward. Biblical scholars
Terence E. Fretheim, Karen Winslow, and
John Goldingay affirm it. Others include writers
Madeleine L'Engle and
Paul C. Borgman, mathematician
D.J. Bartholomew and biochemist/theologian
Arthur Peacocke. ==Philosophical arguments==