Free Will and God's Foreknowledge - a new compatibilist solution Flavio Cesar Cavalcante Correa Abstract This article reviews the apparent incompatibility between human freedom and God’s knowledge about future events. Although reviewed by many philosophers and theologians throughout history, this problem still lingers as something that challenges all to provide a comprehensive answer. The proposed solution will expand the concept of God’s knowledge, encompassing all potential future scenarios that can happen, based on past circumstances, knowledge of the rules that govern all actions in the universe, and all contingent variables. With this, it can be stated that the Expansion of God’s knowledge solution categorically resolves the incompatibility as it is presented. 1. Appreciating the problem A common philosophical and theological problem is human's free will and its apparent incompatibility with God knowledge of the future. If we have free will, and we can truly choose our actions, so God does not know what can happen in the future. However, God is an all-known entity, so we are either bound by God's knowledge of what is going to happen, and therefore not free in our choices, or we are free to choose, but then God is not omniscient and can be wrong on what He knows. So what option is right? Well, according to many philosophers and theologians, there are some ways of elaborating the problem so it can become easier to resolve. There are two schools that address what has been called "Theological Fatalism". The two schools are the Compatibilists and the Incompatibilists. So, let us imagine a situation about a future event, let us say, that I will go to work tomorrow at 8 am. If tomorrow comes and I actually go to work at 8 am, then I can say that I knew in advance that I would go to work, even though some events could have proven me wrong (like I get sick and therefore unable to go to work). In this situation, the issue is not that I knew, but that something else could have happened, thus preventing me from going to work. The issue with God's knowledge is related to His