I think that's possible, that He created a world in which I have a choice to make about whether to help my wife with the dishes or berate her for not doing them...he knows all the options I have before me, and what actions he might take as a result of each of my choices...BUT I would say he also knows which choice I will make.
I see what you are saying, and you are identifying the point that was so difficult for me to grab hold of without it slipping through my fingers. If we say something is possible then it may or may not obtain, and that is the true state of the possibility. When it becomes the case that it
will obtain, then that is the event's true state and at such point it is no longer a possibility. If God knows event E as a possibility then that is it's true state. If God were to know event E as a certainty then that is it's true state, but never would we say that a possibility is a certainty. Once a possibility becomes a certainty then it no longer is a possibility. So, if God makes something a possibility He therefore knows it as a possibility, and that to his credit. If He made something a possibility but then knew it as a certainty He would be deceiving Himself and this He can not do. So, if something is a possibility from His perspective then so it it. On the other had, if He made something to be a certainty, then it cannot be the case that it is a possibility. If all things are known as certainties to God, then there can not be any ontological possibilities. It must necessarily be the case then that God creates no possibilities and anything that we may consider as a possibility is simply an illusion, an amazingly convincing illusion.
If God creates something as a possibility then that is what it is. He knows it as such and for that He should not be shamed by finite man who's need for certainty must be projected on God.
So... If Lucifer & Eve do not rebel, God's plan in that scenario still leads to his desired end? What about the opposite? ALL the angels rebel, all the people rebel, and no person EVER turns to God of their own choice? This possibility also does not jeapardize God's eternal plan?
I too came up with all kinds of scenarios in which God's predeterminations would be overthrown. It took a while for all of this to seem at least internally coherent. Notice what I said though,
(1) that none of the possibilities He allows to exist put in jeopardy God's desired final outcome.
If the possibility of thwarting God's predetermination was to theoretically exist then it would not be allowed. This agrees with the sentiment of HoS's comment above. That should satisfy the question. Let me know if not and we can discuss more.
In response to the following:
(2) God knows all that is to be known about this project, therefore He knows reality as it is and is never of a false belief on the matter.
(3) In this world, He would know all of the events' possibilities and it would never be the case that there were any possibilities for which He was unaware of their existence. And,
you said:
If God knows all, how is it that you are not saying he knows what our future free choices will be?
If God knows all, and it is His plan that possibilities exist, then it is the case he is more than familiar with all of the possibilities. We, of course, cannot choose to do anything that is not a possibility. So, to say that, to his shame, He doesn't know what we will do is to assume a different premise than this thought experiment's premise: why should He know something to 'be' when it 'is not'? Now, that would be to his shame. (law of noncontradiction) In this thought experiment, since what I may choose to do is known to God as a possibility then my choice does not yet exist in order to be known. When my choice does come into existence then yes, He knows. What kind of world did He make? Did He make a world that contains possibilities? If He knows the certainty of it's obtaining then how can it be described as a possibility?
Continuing... I said:
Imagining, again for sake of argument, the above world, of what difficiency can God be accused?
The difficiency of not knowing all things, which I believe the bible teaches he does.
Yes, I agree, He knows all things and the Bible teaches such. "Omniscience" makes for a nice descriptor that we can all say we agree with. But what do you/we mean when we say that? Surely we don't mean to say that God does not know something to be what it is not. Does He know the DNA of unicorns? Does he know the marital status of a married bachelor? We know the answer to these questions. For the same reason, in this thought experiment, God cannot be accused of a difficiency and it is such that in this world He knows all.
-I agree. Everybody will admit God COULD create beings that he controls completely that have no freedom of choice whatsoever...the question is what DID he create? On the flip side, Some Calvinists might argue that God WOULD NOT, maybe even COULD not create creatures with totally free wills because that would be considered something against his character (soveriegn), akin to becoming less sovereign, and would therefore be as unheard of as God breaking a promise (another thing that would go against his character).
I agree and think that a little closer analysis of the greek ideas of "omni" and "the good" and "perfection" will show that they are illogical and not praiseworthy. Plato and neoplatonism did much harm to theology.