by jimwalton » Fri Jun 19, 2015 9:45 am
Sure. The plan of God is to save the world through the seed of the woman (Gn. 3.15), to bless the world through the descendants of Abraham (Gn. 12.2-3; 28.14), to create a people for himself (Ex. 6.7). These themes carry through the whole Bible.
As far as omniscience and free will, free will is inherent in and fundamental to the Bible's account of creation. The mandate to rule in Gn. 1.26, on the basis of the image (also in 26) implies the same exercise of free will that God exercised throughout the chapter. So also the blessings of "be fruitful and multiply" (1.28), the mandate to fill up and subdue the earth (1.28). It implies a legitimate degree of sovereignty, control, and direction. That humanity is to work and care for the garden (priestly terms, Gn. 2.15) are also indicators of free will. The decision presented in 2.16 with regard to the tree are, as you can see, further down the line and not the only way humanity is expected to apply his and her free will.
Free will is implicit in the definition of love. The Bible is quite firm about God being a God of love (Ex. 15.13; 20.6; Jn. 3.16, and hundreds of others) and that we are to love him in return (Dt. 6.5; 1 Cor. 2.9; Rom. 13.10 and hundreds of others). We understand by definition that love and free will can only coexist as long as there is no violation. If I constrain you, I am not acting out of love, but out of force. If I say you have free will, but then add, "But you can only choose the good," then you don't have free will, by definition. The only way both love and free will can be present is if there is true freedom.
The teaching of the Bible is that God, being non-determined, created man as a non-determined person. We are not programmed, or slaves to our desires, but have the ability to choose and an option of self-determination and self-control. If I am a slave to my desires, I am reduced to machine programming; it is to conclude that humanity is an illusion. The Bible teaches the very opposite.
Logically speaking, if free will doesn't exist, we couldn't know it. In fact, we couldn't know anything. Knowledge is justified true belief. We decide if a belief is true by comparing it to the reality to which it refers, and compare it with competing ideas, and choose which idea best fits reality. This requires some level of free will.
Now it's your turn: You have given absolutely no substantiation to your position that "the concept of omniscience is logically impossible." Let's see your reasoning, if it's simple logic.