Now wait a sec. You're confused about things here. So let me try and straighten things out. Berkoff is a traditionalist and a classical theist. Some critics call his approach paleo-Calvinsm. Classical theism, the traditional Christian description of God, came largely from Hellenic philosophy, not Scripture. The Greeks enshrined the immune and the immutable. Translated into teh Christian doctrine of God, this meant God was described as void of body, parts , passions, compassion, wholly immutable. Aristotle's Unmoved Mover was baptized Christian. Hence, classical theism is actually about as pagan as you can get. Obviously then, classical theists faced a real challenge when th3ey came to biblical passages, such as Hosea 11:8, that attribute changing emotions to God. Their solution was to argue such passages were only mere figures of speech that had absolutely nothing to do with the actual nature of God. Calvin, for example, called such passages "baby talk." In his sermon delivered on Tuesday, June 25, 1549, on Jer. 15, he stated to the congregation, "Our Lord, nevertheless, did everything to correct his people as a father would his child. Seeing that He could not succeed in converting people to the path of righteousness, He laments, 'Alas, am I not unhappy? I have done al I can to make men righteous. Yet I have not succeeded.' It was not that Our Lord was subject to emotion, but that he wished to speak in a way fitting to our nature." For further information here, see my translation titled "Sermons on Jeremiah, by Jean Calvin," Edwin Mellen Press, 1990, p. 37. I and other process people take a different approach. We argue the Bible meant business with these anthropomorphic metaphors, intended them to be taken as a true analogy to the real nature of God. As I said in a previous post, you can quarrel all you with the anthropomorphic imagery of Scripture as a mere concession to our feeble intellects; still, at a minimum, these mean God is subject to changing affective states, analogous to pain and pleasure, in ourselves.