Why have you never had to consider that you may be wrong? There is nothing that gives me the idea that any kind of god has any intentions.
I definitely can be wrong--I would never assert that regarding my religious beliefs that I am right. What is right is the Bible. Unfortunately, there is nothing I can say or do (on my own, on entirely my own efforts) that will convince anyone of that. The main point concerning the God of the Bible is that we are not at the center of His plan. He is. We are so insignificant and really non-essential to it all, yet it seems like we get so caught up in the mistaken assumption that we somehow are very vital to God and that He needs us.
My understanding of the Bible can be entirely wrong. Any one of our understandings of the Bible can be wrong; it is my opinion that there is none of us on earth who have a perfectly correct understanding in every regard of His letter to us. Since we are relying entirely upon Him to understand it, we should pray to Him before reading it that His Holy Spirit will be a guide to our understanding; that we lean not upon our own judgment.
I trust in God that He will lead me to my understanding of the Bible. It is all I can do. Whatever I do understand of it, it is His will that I understand what I do.
If I am totally wrong and mistaken in it, it is my wish spiritually that I will be satisfied with whatever God has ordained for me. Of course, my physical self cries out against it. I would be utterly crushed. I don't believe any human flesh can ever desire the will of God upon them.
I don't know about other religions. I don't have a real desire to learn about them; I don't have the time. I don't have a real strong compulsion to make sure "I am right". I know that I cannot be.
You don't need to understand decisions that God makes to understand that God can't love everyone and be capable of doing anything in the presence of mass suffering or mass calamity.
So you ignore the bad? How about the mass murderer who has given some of his time & money to charities. Would you worship that mass murderer for his altruistic deeds?0
What's relevant is that it is logically impossible for an all-loving & all-powerful being to exist in the presence of mass suffering or mass calamity.
This seems to be a significant topic to you, and it seems a worth-while point you make. I have come to the conclusion that it is definitely correct according to our logic. Also, it states very clearly that God hated at least one person: Esau. It is my understanding from what I remember that He hated him from before he started doing anything--it wasn't anything that Esau did that made God hate him; we may gather from this that He created him to hate him. Sounds like a harsh God from our human perspectives.
Well, I haven't come to a clear understanding of it. It just seems more plausible that God does not love everyone. Yet I can definitely be wrong about that. I am still studying Scripture and have a long way to go with that.
With that being said, however, I think it is important to realize that some things which we may consider as acts of God hating us are not to be understood as that from His perspective. That is just the thing though, that we are limited to our own viewpoint. We are to be thankful to God for all things, not just the things which seem good to us from our perspective.