My main thrust is to point out that the God of the three omnis you attack isn't the Christian conception of God and therefore is a straw man argument
Except I haven't actually put forward an argument against the god of the omnis. Further, I've been trying, without success, to get you to back up your assertion that
anybody has produced a straw man argument against such a god.
By dint that your theories of God put him at the beginning of time predicting what will happen. That is the Deists conception of God.
I have no such theories. I'm just pointing out some of the logical consequences to what you (and Steve) said about omniscience not including the future if it doesn't exist.
How many more times do I need to explain this? Are you even reading my posts?
It was pointed out to you that relativity of simultainity was irrelevant.
Irrelevant to what? It's not irrelevant to a growing block universe or any other in which the future doesn't exist.
I've achieved my Goal do you disagree that any perfect prediction made at the beginning would already be validated and based on by Gods attendence at the actual event. You are therefore redefining what prediction is and perhaps you should use a different word.
You still haven't said whether you think the future exists for your god or not. Until you define what relationship you think your god has with time, this is just meaningless wittering.
My point was to say that if it were to be established that only the past and present existed anything that knew everything about those two still would be omniscient definitionally.
...and would, if it were also an omnipotent god, know the future too, via perfect prediction.
I never claimed that WAS the case...
Yes, that's the problem with you trying to make a straw man accusation, you won't say what you think the "true Christian" view is and you haven't said what specifically you think are straw man arguments.
...and unfortunately any future that we can come up with is a prediction. any future God can come up with is ordination
You can call god's predictions ordination, if you want, there would be no functional difference. That was part of my original argument: god has established any rules and would know of anything it wants to do outside of them,
Could you please direct me to where I said this anyway?
What the hell was the point in saying
"the future, by definition may actually not exist meaning that nothing omniscient would be under any definitional obligation to " know it "." if you didn't mean that
"god cannot directly know of future events until they happen"?
Jeez, do you have any idea at all what you actually think about god and time or the first clue of which arguments are based on a view that no Christians hold and are therefore straw man arguments, or is the all just hot air and bullshit?