OldSoul,
It works very much like predetermining what reality is limited to. If you start from that perspective, you are bound to arrive at conclusions that establish your initial assumption because you are predestined to exclude anything that would lead outside your paradigm.
I don't think this is the case with me. For one thing, I don't believe in God at all, so I don't have any presuppositions of what he/she/it/they/blob might be like. However, I do have a faculty for abstract thinking which allows me to entertain other people's concepts of God and think about the implications based on their definitions of him. So, as a ludicrous example, if you were to explicitly define God to be all-loving but also all-slaughtering, I would say that your concept demands an explanation for how both can be true. (There are many ways one could explain this. For example, one could say that slaughter is actually an aspect of love, etc, etc.) This would not be me cubbyholing God into a box, but rather trying to make sense of the definition that you yourself have put forth.
The same is true of the perpetuated concept that God is like something we know of. If we restrict God to a paradigm of our creation and invention, we will bind "Him" to our own concepts of morality. That would indeed be creating God in our image. However, LittleToe and some others here have dispensed with that starting point. You don't understand why God "hasn't acted" because you are only looking at it from one predetermined and unwavering vantage point.
I'm not trying to bind God to any concept of morality, as I pointed out before. I merely trying to take your definitions and make sense of them. If you tell me A = B, and B = C, then logically, by your definition of the items, A must equal C (regardless of whether I believe in A, B, or C). Now if suddenly you claim that in this particular case A does not equal C, then you should have a good explanation for why. Your explanation could be as simple as "A, B, and C are not part of a logically coherent system, so your conclusion is invalid." But an explanation is required.
The point I'm trying to make here is that I'm perfectly willing to entertain other definitions of God that are logically coherent. In fact, it would be nice to hear one. In LT's last post, he says that humans are "shards" of God (sounds a bit like the book God's Debris). If this is the position, then it changes the implications entirely, because we no longer have a disinterested third-party watching, supposedly with power and love, but total inaction, from the sidelines. In the LT definition (if I have understood it correctly), there is no third-party at all. To my mind, this explanation successfully and logically deals with why God does not act, by removing God as a separate individual from the equation. (And incidentally, it doesn't seem very different from the non-theist's point of view.)
LT,
Japan is great. I'm studying up a storm here. One of my main goals here is to become more fluently literate, so I'm reading the newspaper, etc, for at least a couple hours a day. Tomorrow I'm going to an art museum and a science museum in downown Tokyo!
SNG