Can we change God’s mind?

Can We Change God’s Mind? Didn’t Moses Show We Can?

Published On: May 9, 2025

The story is familiar to most Bible readers. In Numbers 14, God‘s ready to wipe out the rebellious Israelites and start over with Moses. Then something remarkable happens—Moses intercedes, appealing to God’s reputation and promises, and God relents. The divine death sentence is commuted.

So, did Moses actually change God’s mind? And if he did, what does that mean for how we understand prayer, divine sovereignty, and God’s immutability? These aren’t merely abstract theological questions. They touch the very heart of our faith and daily practice. Why pray if God’s plans can’t be changed? Or if they can change, how is God really sovereign?

 

THE CASE OF MOSES: WHAT REALLY HAPPENED?

In Numbers 14:11-20, we find Israel at a critical moment. The people have rebelled after hearing the spies’ report about Canaan. God declares to Moses: “How long will this people despise me? And how long will they not believe in me, in spite of all the signs that I have done among them? I will strike them with the pestilence and disinherit them, and I will make of you a nation greater and mightier than they.” (Numbers 14:11-12)

Moses responds with passionate intercession, arguing that destroying Israel would damage God’s reputation among the nations and contradict His promises. The Lord then says:

“I have pardoned, according to your word.” (Numbers 14:20)

At first glance, this appears to be an open-and-shut case: Moses changed God’s mind. But is that what really happened?

 

DIFFERENT THEOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES

Before examining the Reformed view, let’s consider how other theological traditions approach this dilemma.

The Open Theism View: Open Theists maintain God has limited foreknowledge and genuinely adapts His plans in response to human decisions. For them, Moses literally persuaded God to pursue a course of action He hadn’t previously intended.

  • Where it falls short: This view contradicts Scripture’s clear teaching on God’s comprehensive foreknowledge. Isaiah 46:9-10 declares God “declaring the end from the beginning and from ancient times things not yet done.” Ephesians 1:11 describes God as one “who works all things according to the counsel of his will.” Open Theism ultimately diminishes God’s sovereignty and wisdom by making Him reactionary rather than proactive in His governance.

The Process Theology View: Process theologians argue God evolves alongside creation and is genuinely affected by it. In this view, God’s mind changed because Moses presented new information or perspectives.

  • Where it falls short: This view contradicts biblical teachings about God’s immutability. “I the Lord do not change” (Malachi 3:6) and “with whom there is no variation or shadow due to change” (James 1:17) explicitly state God’s unchanging nature. Process theology often requires reinterpreting or dismissing key biblical doctrines about God’s nature.

The Arminian View: Arminians believe God knows all possibilities but genuinely responds to human freedom and prayer. In this framework, God knew Moses might intercede but waited to see what would happen before finalizing His decision.

  • Where it falls short: While this view takes God’s foreknowledge seriously, it struggles to explain how God can both know all future events with certainty and simultaneously be open to changing His plans. It also tends to elevate human agency in ways that can unintentionally diminish God’s ultimate sovereignty.

 

THE REFORMED PERSPECTIVE: A MORE COMPLETE ANSWER

The Reformed tradition offers a coherent explanation that preserves both God’s sovereignty and the genuine significance of prayer.

God’s Two Wills: Reformed theology distinguishes between God’s decretive will (what He has eternally ordained) and His preceptive or revealed will (what He declares or commands). Deuteronomy 29:29 supports this distinction: “The secret things belong to the LORD our God, but the things that are revealed belong to us and to our children forever.”

In the case of Moses, God’s declared intention to destroy Israel was not His secret decree. Rather, it was a revealed intention that served multiple purposes: testing Moses, demonstrating Israel’s deservedness of judgement, and creating the occasion for mercy to be displayed.

Anthropomorphic Language: Scripture often describes God in human terms (anthropomorphism) to help us understand His actions. When the Bible speaks of God “relenting” or “repenting,” it describes a change in God’s actions from our limited human perspective, not a change in His eternal purposes.

This isn’t a semantic trick. Numbers 23:19 explicitly states: “God is not man, that he should lie, or a son of man, that he should change his mind.” And yet Scripture uses language of God changing His mind. This apparent contradiction is resolved when we understand the Bible often describes God’s actions in ways we can comprehend, not as philosophical statements about His nature.

 

PRAYER AS DECREED MEANS TO DECREED ENDS

God ordains both the ends and means. Prayer doesn’t change God’s ultimate purposes; rather, prayer itself is a divinely appointed means through which God accomplishes His purposes.

When we pray, we’re not changing God’s mind—we’re fulfilling our role in His unchanging plan. God had ordained Moses would pray and that He would “relent” in response to that prayer. Both the prayer and the response were part of God’s eternal counsel.

 

THE COVENANT FRAMEWORK

Moses’ appeal wasn’t new information God hadn’t considered. Instead, Moses appealed to God’s own character and covenant promises. Moses reminded God of what God had already committed to do and be.

In this light, God’s “change of mind” was actually His faithfulness to His unchanging character and covenant promises. The appearance of change was for Israel’s benefit, teaching them about intercession, mercy, and covenant faithfulness.

 

CONCLUSION: CAN WE CHANGE GOD’S MIND?

So, did Moses change God’s mind? Yes and no. From our limited human perspective, it appears as if Moses’ intercession altered God’s course of action. But from the perspective of God’s eternal decree, Moses’ prayer was itself part of God’s unchanging plan to show mercy to Israel.

The Reformed understanding doesn’t diminish prayer—it elevates it. Prayer becomes not an attempt to change the mind of a capricious deity but participation in the eternal purposes of a sovereign God who has ordained that our prayers matter.

We can pray boldly like Moses, knowing our prayers are taken up into God’s eternal plan. As the psalmist confidently declared, “The LORD has heard my plea; the LORD accepts my prayer” (Psalm 6:9).

As John Calvin wrote, “Believers do not pray with the view of informing God about things unknown to him, or of exciting him to do his duty, or of urging him as though he were reluctant. On the contrary, they pray in order that they may arouse themselves to seek him, that they may exercise their faith in meditating on his promises, that they may relieve themselves from their anxieties by pouring them into his bosom; in a word, that they may declare that from him alone they hope and expect, both for themselves and others.”

 

CAN WE CHANGE GOD’S MIND? RELATED FAQs

If God already knows what He’s going to do, why should I bother praying? Prayer isn’t primarily about changing God’s plans but about aligning ourselves with His purposes. God has ordained prayer as a means through which He accomplishes His unchanging will—your prayers are part of His eternal plan, not interruptions to it. As Augustine said, “God wills to give us some things, but only if we pray for them.”

  • How does understanding God’s sovereignty enhance rather than diminish our prayer life? Seeing prayer as participation in God’s plan rather than an attempt to change it shifts our focus from our persuasive power to God’s faithfulness. This understanding actually intensifies prayer because we know God has ordained our prayers to matter eternally, not just as suggestions He might consider. The pressure of “changing God’s mind” is removed, allowing us to pray with both boldness and submission.
  • What other biblical examples show God accomplishing His will through the prayers of His people? Elijah’s prayer for rain (James 5:17-18) demonstrated God using prayer as His means to end the drought He’d ordained. Daniel’s prayer in Daniel 9 came after he understood from Jeremiah that the 70 years of exile were ending, showing prayer can be the ordained means of fulfilling prophecy. In the New Testament, the early church’s prayer in Acts 4:23-31 resulted in the boldness and power needed to fulfil the Great Commission.
  • How do we explain God’s unchanging nature alongside His apparent “relenting” to someone new to the faith? We might use the parent-child analogy: a good parent might state a consequence but later show mercy without changing their character or overall parenting plan. God’s “relenting” demonstrates His unchanging attributes of justice and mercy working together, not a change in His nature or eternal plan. What appears as change from our limited perspective is actually the consistent outworking of God’s unchanging character in different situations.

What about verses that explicitly say God “repented” or “changed His mind”? These passages use anthropomorphism—describing God in human terms so we can understand His actions from our perspective. Scripture also clearly teaches God doesn’t change (Numbers 23:19, Malachi 3:6), so we must interpret these “change” passages in light of this established truth. The language of God “changing His mind” describes a change in His revealed actions toward us, not a change in His eternal purposes or nature.

 

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