BTS,
"A bit of a logic failure there. I fixed it for you."
- Actually there was no "logic" failure.
A logical argument isn't evaluated in that manner as to it's "logic". I think you're confusing valid forms with truth-values of statements. The thing you were referring to wasn't even an example of logic, it was simply a statement, and this taken from someone elses "argument".
We wrongly judge each other all the time. Even in our court systems. How many guilty walk and innocent pay? So really, the issue is not the submitting of God to human judgement, which happens all the time and with everyone that thinks about it, but the correct judgement of God. As I have demonstrated, this is not really possible due to our own limitations. We cannot judge the will of this being without possesing these same attributes. In our legal system we are required to be judged by "a jury of our peers". We are not God's peers.
It's hard to break this down so you can see what you're doing more clearly, but I'll try.
You say we "wrongly" judge each other all the time, but you haven't demonstrated this to be the case. Certainly people are at odds with the judgments made by others, but to declare these to be "wrong" is to suggest that one happens to have in his/her posession the attribute of infallibility. (Even if this were so, such a claim would still need be evaluated and judged by others and this "claim" would likely remain a "claim" at least until you killed off all those who disagreed. (perhaps this is the game after all))
You also make the suggestion, albeit implied that one must be identical with another entity, (such as A=A) in order to form a correct evaluation of that entity. I would suggest that this is a redefinition of the term "correct" to that of ""identity". If this were so (which it cannot be without such a redefinition) I'd say that you've said it must be necessary to at least be as insane in the same manner and to the same degree as the next insane man to form a sane judgment of this other.
That's incoherent. Moreover the illustration of the legal system fails in another important manner - it is not as if we have power greater than this being that we can or could ever inflict punishments such that our "judgment" ought need be one of this being's "peers". The clear illustration would be that we who are in this concentration camp called "this system of things" have identified and in some cases "judged" the one running this camp to be unworthy of our love and affection. These "judgments" never need to be the judgments of "peers".