However it's fairly easy to conceive of how God could create without suffering.
I am sure it is. What is not easy, is conceiving how God split his life force into fragments (humans for this discussion) and have those humans know or be aware that they exist. How God could do this in such a way that suffering was not needed. It is easy for us to sit here and wish it, much like I might wish a circle to become a square, it just can't do that by definition of identity. God by being God, can not become something else, unless it takes on a different nature (human aka: sinners, or rebellious to self.
This delves into how something singular can become dualistic, or pluralistic and those fragments be unique to the singular.
If we can program something, then God could do it. It's easy to consider a virtual programmed world in which there's no suffering; especially if the programmer is omniscient: it just takes a little more code.
Again you are right it is very easy to conceive of a world with no suffering. The problem is with my suggestion, that God is limited by the laws of identity (or intrinsic laws) and if God tried to create himself he is faced with an impossible task. God would have to first create a method by which his creations could perceive they existed. In order for God to do that, he would have to make them different. Once something is not God, it is no longer perfect. However it has to be imperfect to know it is alive by contrast to the perfect God.
For example, if I had identical apples down to the very last DNA particular, we would find they would have to be the same apple, because if they weren't than it would mean they occupy two separate places in space time, which means they are not the same.
So something gets its identity, by reflection of what it is not when compared to other things. Otherwise it would never know it exists.
So you see the task is not to conceive of a world with no suffering, but to create other conscious beings that are different than a perfect God.
Consider... say, Grand Theft Auto. The reason people die in Grand Theft Auto is because the program allows for things like vehicles to strike them: rather than the vehicle passing through a person or stopping in a dead stop without worrying about inertia, the programmers have to deliberately and thoughtfully program into the world things like inertia for the vehicle and collision detection between the vehicle and the pedestrian.
It's easy to see how to resolve the problem of suffering in Grand Theft Auto: remove collision detection when a vehicle meets a person and the person won't suffer, or remove inertia when a vehicle strikes a person and the vehicle will just stop without hurting the person it struck or the person inside the vehicle.
It's easy to program a world without suffering. For any scenario in which suffering would arise physically (perhaps not mental suffering like unrequited love, but still), it just takes a little more or less code. The crudest of all codes that would solve the problem is a code frequently found in many games: the "god code," which makes player characters unable to be damaged. Very very crude, and a real method used by a God would likely be more than that, but I'm just pointing that that it's a myth that it's inconceivable how God could eliminate physical suffering; it's actually quite cognitive.
So you are making an assumption here that God can create conscious beings without having them suffer.
Let's think about what is involved here for a second for God to create other beings that are conscious, or ANY creation at all for that matter.
God would first, have to exert a power or force or wish or something for an action to take place, and in this case we are saying the action is creating life. God would have to give off some of his life force which forms into humans or whatever. Now we learned from the above post I made that in order for God to do that, there would have to be some kind of difference, for identity, otherwise God can't create. At this point, is the crux. Since this new creation of life has to be different from God in order for it to have identity, can this life form be perfect? No, because only God is perfect.
So what does this life form become? At first it takes on a rough form (Adam) and eventually learns it's state, and then can become more like God (Jesus). This is the only logical way he could create. Now once something is not perfect (for identities sake) who are
we to say that as a result of that, intrinsically, suffering wont exist? Could be simply cause and effect.
Example:
{Cause: Perfection becomes not perfect}
{Effect: Not perfect, suffers (at first)}
If we can program it, God can actualize it. Why didn't He, since we can program it?
But we can't create anything perfect, or perpetual, and it appear God can't either by law of identity. However he can create things that are eternal. Understand the difference here?
Someone with even today's technology could program a virtual world where physical suffering isn't possible and where there are no innocent victims. Of course we don't know how to program sentience yet, but that's irrelevant; what's in question are the physical laws of the world that allow for suffering: just pretend the computer citizens are sentient. You can't argue "but maybe that which causes the sentience is what makes all other stuff that causes suffering necessary" either, because laws can be localized in programs (it's logically possible for laws to be localized in reality, too, which is the point).
I hope you see the error of your way so far... this last paragraph seem irrelevant to me...
Thanks...