cksalmon wrote:Zee,
What would rule out, to your thinking:
(3) God is the same and people are the same
?
It appears that you've concluded that (3) is to be ruled out from the start. Or, I could be totally misreading your thought experiment, in which case I'm sorry for having done so and would welcome correction.
Thank you for the question, CK! Since this is someone else's thread, I hope they don't mind the intrusion. I will try to keep it concise.
I should have clarified an assumption I make: I take the liberty to assume that the Bible authors *really* believed what they wrote as literal truth. I do not think they created the Bible as a subterfuge. I feel I'm being generous in my assumption, but it is a happier way to look at mankind. I believe they thought God really had a hand in helping their people at the expense of other peoples. I believe they felt God wanted them to do the things they did to other peoples. This is analogous to someone saying Joseph Smith had good intent when he wrote the Book of Mormon and created his theology.
So, the things spoken of in the OP were not considered to be morally bad by the authors. I believe the authors felt the divine acts were good. Otherwise, why would they attribute them to God?
Today, it is different. Today, people consider the things mentioned in the OP to be bad.
Since the Old Testament authors and people today think differently about what was written, the people (their opinions) have changed. Therefore, the authors of the Bible are *different* than the people of today. Therefore, the people have changed and God has not changed.
Rarely do people consider the idea of people always being the same and God changing. Maybe the authors of the Bible really did write what they were told (directly by God). Maybe God really wanted that horrible stuff to happen. Maybe there was a revolt in heaven and now a better God rules the heavens.