Gob wrote:Every time he stubs his toe; "Bugger, I knew I was going to do that!"
So He is a Calvinist after all!
Big RR - omniscience is one of the perfect attributes of God. It means to have perfect and comprehensive knowledge of all things. I'm unsure as to what "all" means if it doesn't mean "all"

If it is only knowledge of "some" things then it wouldn't be "omni" at all.
Your point re the Devil and Job has a flaw. Perhaps a couple of them. The first is that the Devil (like Andrew

) doesn't know that God is omniscient; He might be, and He might not be.
Secondly, God never tells the Devil that Job can or will withstand his evil wiles - He doesn't make a "bet" at all, although that is a popular way to misstate the case. God merely says "Job's a stand-up guy" and it's the Devil who says "Only because you look after him. But I could change that". "Go ahead", says God, "show me" and Satan gives it his best shot. The Devil may not be stupid (jury's out on that one) but he does persuade humans to take self-destructive decisions and paths, regardless of what God's attributes are. For all the Devil could tell (not being omniscient himself), God might have "known" that Job would fall also.
Satan's personal experience might be argued to have shown him that God doesn't know everything. Presumably since he started a rebellion in Heaven, he might have reasoned that his action took God by surprise - else why didn't God stop him? He just can't accept that his free will decision to rebel was/is/will be known by God because then it wouldn't be his choice, would it? (I speak of his viewpoint, not mine).
Another objection (amongst many) is that the story may just be that; a story or extended parable designed by God to teach lessons and not an actual history of an actual event.
I think we see the same kind of overwhelming hubris in the Devil when he tempts Jesus in the Wilderness. The fact is, if Jesus had not been the son of God, he would probably have fallen for the first temptation, let alone the second or third. But the Devil, even knowing that he is the son of God, still thinks it might work..... pride I think, plus the sheer way that the temper's character operates. He is, after all, (self) bound and determined to oppose God at every opportunity. And since he's perfectly capable of reading the Bible, he knows what's going to happen in the end because God has shared that piece of omniscience with everyone. Like so many others, he just won't believe it?
Meade
For Christianity, by identifying truth with faith, must teach-and, properly understood, does teach-that any interference with the truth is immoral. A Christian with faith has nothing to fear from the facts