Hi Thana,
...which all the more illustrates my point.
There is a Buddhist story about a serial killer named Anguli Mala. Some here may have heard of it already. Basically, the story goes that this serial killer was a jungle dweller who murdered travelers in order to collect 1,000 finger bones for a necklace he was making. One day when he had managed to collect 999 bones, Anguli spotted a monk. The thousandth finger bone, at last! Anguli Mala rushed up to slay the monk... but stopped dead in his tracks. He felt the inner tranquility of this monk, indeed his rageful desire to kill was entirely absent. Overcome by this sense of peace, he asked, "Who are you that you can quell my inner fires?"
"I have quelled my own inner fires," the Buddha replied.
The murderer knelt down, confessed his wrongdoing through tears of regret and remorse, and begged the Buddha to accept him as a monk so that he could try to make restitution with the rest of his days, and perhaps find inner peace for himself. For in that moment, Anguli Mala felt for himself what it was like to truly be at peace. He saw through his self-made delusions, saw the truth of his own evil, and in seeing the truth, wanted a wiser and more compassionate legacy to prevail.
I bring this story up because, if an ordinary man of extraordinary insight (i.e. the Buddha) can conceivably inspire even a serial killer to abandon his evil ways and spend his remaining days trying to make up for his past, what does this redemptive insight say about a God that regards murder, warfare, and genocide as a valid course of action? Or who considers eternal hellfire as the best way to deal with "sinners?"
Ultimately, I think the ancient Hebrews simply imagined and wrote about their conceptions of God based on the limitations of their own insights for their time and place. They did not see the more enlightened view found in this Buddhist story, and their God concept reflected the best they could conjure up in its stead. I think that throughout history, the various God concepts conceived of by the various Jewish, Christian, and Islamic sects have been a form of Rorschach test: I believe the God concept of each individual throughout time tells us far more about that individual than it does about what this God (if it even exists) is really about.