So why do you choose to not accept it?
I really appreciate your approach here, so I don't want anything I say to be perceived as flippant, irritable, argumentative, preachy ... all the things that typically happen. We just have to appreciate that, for some reason, the religious paradigm I espouse seems to be incredibly difficult for people to accept. For all their statements that they leave it to me to express my experiences with God, they continue to apply all kinds of stuff based on what they think God is supposed to be or how other people have attempted to define God.
So, it's as simple as this - omniscience is not a word in my religious vocabulary. I did use the word in this thread, and maybe I should repent what many seem to think was a horrible transgression, but I still think it was appropriate to the context in which I said it. Just because I don't use "omniscience" to express my experiences with God doesn't mean I'm banned from using the word when the circumstances call for it.
The word is not in my religious vocabulary for the very reason that it causes threads like this one. So, I've been forced to say, "God knows all that can be known." Even then, for the purposes of this conversation, I should say something like, "God knows all that I know and my experiences indicate he knows more than I know" ... but I get tired of typing that out over and over.
When you entered your first science class, you assumed your science teacher knew more than you do about science. There was no way for you to prove it, but it was a pretty darned reasonable thing to assume.
@Chesterton even made a quip about this earlier in the thread - the silliness of people arguing over omniscience when they assume all the time without proof that people know more than them.
Now, once the science teacher said, "water is composed of hydrogen and oxygen," you had verification that in the past the teacher knew more than you. But now you also know water is composed of hydrogen and oxygen, so does the teacher
still know more than you? And so on and so on and so on. You never know, but at some point it just becomes silly to constantly debate it, and the pragmatic approach is to say the teacher know more than you.
God knows more than me. Use whatever word makes you happy to describe that. Does that make sense?