**Your basic misunderstanding, most likely derived from your “contamination” (rather strong word!) by protestants, is that you think that an omnipotent God precludes free will.
That free will and “omnipotent God” can’t possibly exist in the same universe.
They can, and are. The point is that God created man for His reasons, whatever those may be, as “proved” by the fact that we exist, and that, to “make it interesting”, He gave us free will.**
Well, seeing as I was raised Protestant, that I should understand Christianity primarily in Protestant terms is hardly surprising

. I have actually learned a fair amount of new information regarding nuances of Catholic teaching from my participation in this forum. However, I would say rather that my “misunderstanding” is more of a result of expecting the English language to mean what it is generally accepted to mean.
I think that “omnipotent” means “all-powerful,” “almighty” as in "having absolute power over all " as the dictionary labels it (Merriam Webster online). I take that to mean that God is capable (has the power to) of doing anything that He desires. If He desires to create humans with free will, I don’t see that there is a barrier to that.
I simply think it is rather circular to claim that the actions of an omnipotent, omniscient God orignate from any reason other than His own desire. If He did not, for some unknown reason and in some way, desire that some portion of humanity be damned, then there is, by your own definition, no possible barrier to His preventing such an occurrence. If He chooses to cede that power to humanity, thereby choosing to limit His power, well, I suppose that is also His desire.
Perhaps I understand the words “all powerful” and “having absolute power” in some way other than Catholics do.
The Church maintains that it is a “mystery” as to how free will and “predestination” (the result of God’s omnipotence) are reconcilable. It’s simply to “weird” a question for us humans to answer.
Okay, I can live with a religion saying “there is no logical basis for this, you simply have to take it on faith.” I don’t, however, acknowledge that that makes it incumbent upon me to then believe it because the religion says so. I prefer less special pleading.
** But since God, by definition, IS omnipotent, and since free will DOES exist, and we ARE here in this universe, all those things must somehow be reconcilable, de facto ('cause they ARE).**
If you say so. To me, it is simply further special pleading and circular reasoning.
Once again, you simply don’t know the basic tenets of the Church (Catholic). Christ Jesus was FULLY God and FULLY man.
Well, I thought I did. I was taken a bit off guard by your statement that “He limited Himself as we are limited.” Seems to me that if God, in His being as Jesus, “limited Himself as humans are limited,” He was therefore no longer omnipotent (as humans are not omnipotent) and, therefore, by your own definition of God as omnipotent, not any longer God, as no being that is less than omnipotent can be God.