[/B][/QUOTE]Christian Facts: God is without sin. He knows the future, and knows what we will do even before we do it...[/B][/QUOTE]
Yes.
So... provided that the God of the New Testament is also the God of the Old Testament, how can he be described as jealous and quick to anger (I would personally add sadistic, insecure, unreasonable, vengeful, unjust and unforgiving) when those traits are faults?
In Psalm 103, it says that the Lord is slow to anger.
See, God can be described. He can be described in many ways. Different people describe him in different ways. You yourself demonstrate this by adding sadistic, et al.
Faults...that's a value call, and that would depend on your personal morality (unless you believe in objective morality, which you may or may not believe in).
If your question is how...well, the answer is ridiculously easy. You and I can describe the sun in different ways. Cheeseburgers. The Magnetic Fields. You just simply describe things as you will. That's how you do it.
See, different people wrote about God in the O.T. and N.T. No two human beings who have ever existed have ever mused about God in exactly the same way. What's so hard to understand about this?
If you're hung up about the failure to have two opinions about God correspond...well, you shouldn't be. Or maybe you should be. Clearly the compilers of the Bible weren't concerned. Clearly people in the Bible had different things to say about God in different circumstances. Case in point...Jesus describes God in a variety of ways. I don't see what's the big hang up here.
There is definitely a trend in the Bible regarding God descriptors that can be followed. Certainly the theology of the Bible writers evolved over the centuries.
Why does he always choose to subject his believers to physically and emotionally painful "tests" us when he already knows what they will do?
Always physically and emotionally painful...that's a stretch, isn't it?
But I get your point. And you just have to read the account of the Crucifixion to understand that God himself subjected his son to a physically and emotionally painful test (I think trial is a better word, but that's a minor quibble).
He already knows what we will do because his knowledge of what we do is contingent on the choices that we will freely make. God is outside of time and to him all points in time are as one. He allows free choice, and because he is God he is aware of the results of our free choices at all times.
Why does he so often take his anger out on the innocent?
Since we have original sin, nobody is innocent.
If you have this idea that certain special *innocent* people are above suffering or "above the wrath of God" (I'm guessing you have OT examples in mind) I disagree with you.
Why is this "just" God condemning 10 generations following the product of either an adulterous union or an interracial union (the translation is in dispute as to which this is) to hell?
I think that some OT God attributions are unfortunate, and as a Christian I don't see Jesus doing such a thing.
-Elliot