I should say BTS... I love your posts and don't want you think me an asshole. Although I do enjoy discussing this kind of thing. (Not arguing!)
God could also choose to manifest himself in an intelligible manner.
Yes but you said previously that, "It is simply not possible for us to know how an omnipotent omniscient omnibenevolent God would act." You seem to want to have both ways. Which goes along with a point that I made earlier that God could choose to act in a manner that would leave no doubt as to his righteousness. Yet he chose to do things that no moral person would ever do, and then leave them unexplained as to why he chose to do them that way! We are left to simply rationalize that God's ways are supposed to be higher than ours. So my question is, why does God not choose to act in a manner that we can morally relate to? Why all the cruelty towards women and the killing of babies and the like?
If it were so, we would be no more than automata. Besides, we could argue that the very rules and logic that bind us on this level are despotic, yet these things are the very substrate of our physical selves. It is within God that we exist and have our being.
I don't see the necessity for us to be automata if God were a cruel dictator. We could call the physical laws despotic, but it's a useless description, as the physical laws simply are what they are. It's like saying gravity is cruel because it prevents us from flying. And the rest of that seems an unprovable assertion.
Certainly, I do not recommend limiting my discussion to a depiction of God in the OT written from a certain point of view.
I can understand why. It would be unfair to a certain extent... but the fact is those things in the OT don't fit into the Christian concept of "God's Love" and hence the need to rationalize or ignore them.
"Humans cannot rightly judge God"
In an absolute sense you are correct, we can't rightly judge anything. But your logic appears to rest on the assumption that a being posessing those qualities is even possible. It would be like saying "I could tell you the color of that invisible unicorn if only I could see it." Prove there's a unicorn first, and then we'll discuss it's attributes.
We are not God's peers.
Yes, but as mentioned, and as you've admitted, God could choose to manifest and behave in a way that is completely understandable to us. Certainly that would not be outside the realm of his power.
gubberningbody - Yes I was giving an opinion on what might be more logically coherent for a believer to say when the assertion is made that "We cannot (as in, 'have no right to') judge God". But the statement "We cannot (as in, 'do not have the ability') to judge God" is problematic as well, as it is based on several assumptions. Excellent points made.