no, no... respectfully... of course He grasped it. He was teaching it to us by first showing us what it is not. The law had to be established before people could even realize they were doing wrong.
How can a will (or anything) be free of what it was created to be?
a lot of christians don't get this. God knowing all things, knew what He was creating and how everything He created would exist from beginning to end. Some seem to think He had to peek into a future He created to find out.
That would mean that God knowingly makes people that exist purely to suffer. People with awful lives that, thanks to no exposure to the "true religion", also are doomed to go to hell. There is no justice in a system that punishes on the basis of belief. Furthermore, there are people such as myself, that want to believe, but can't due to their mind developing in such a way as to not perceive sufficient evidence for the existence of a deity. Not saying that the evidence exists, just that I don't view any information I have been exposed to thus far as being sufficient enough evidence for the existence of deities as to make a believer out of me.
One of the hardest things to make people understand is that what we believe is not fully a conscious choice. For example, unless you are color blind (and thus have uncertainty in what color the sky is) or had never seen the sky, you could never hope to make yourself think that the sky was silver with a gold stripe pattern. Try as hard as you might, but in the end, you will always know that you are lying to yourself. I have been seeking belief for years. To me, atheism is agony; it's a personal problem with being unable to handle mortality.
Do you know the despair of the death of a loved one for a person who believes that death is the end of existence? Do you know the pain of watching more and more people be lost to oblivion, with no hope of ever seeing them again, and no comfort in them being in a better place, or any place for that matter? Do you know the fear of knowing each day brings you closer and closer to the same fate?
If you do, I would imagine it peeks through as doubt in your own faith. That little taste of misery rarely compares to that of a person that honestly thinks it highly improbable that an afterlife exists.
Most atheists manage to eventually accept life and death for what they are, but I highly doubt that I ever will.