I guess I want to get other people's viewpoints on something that's been bothering me. When I read the Bible, I see some horrible things in there like war and plundering, things I could never call good. My sense of empathy and compassion won't allow me to see it as good, but then I see some people saying it's good and even loving on God's part. This is where it really bothers me. Isn't it bad when people start to totally redefine words in their minds to justify terrible things? Let's face it, what the Bible says Israel did to the Canaanites is not loving, not compassionate, not merciful, and not good. You have to totally redefine the meanings of those concepts to say such. Doesn't this suggest that it's dangerous and de-sensatizing to a society to read this book in this sense, literally?
The thing is, Yosef, the Bible isn't a single book telling a single story or putting forth a single, consistent philosophy (or even a single, consistent theology). It's a collection of books reflecting different ideologies, written or collected by different people, in different stages of social development, for different purposes.
You can look at the stories in Deuteronomy and Joshua and all you're really looking at is the standard
nomadic tribesmen meets sedentary, civilized society scenario, told in typical hero-worshiping retrospective style by the descendants of these tribesmen.
Once you get into the prophets you're looking at the writings of social reformers who's ethical level is amazingly progressive for their time and place.
Even the much maligned code of laws in the Torah, taken in the context of time, place, and political climate, deserves credit for it's relatively high level of social consciousness and egalitarianism;
Provisions are made for the poor, the old, for the humanitarian treatment of slaves, the welfare of strangers.
An eye for an eye" might seem barbaric by modern standards but it was a major improvement over the "you take my eye, I cut off your head, your relatives kill 2 of my relatives, we kill 3 of your's..." feud mentality that it was meant to replace.
Taken together the collection contains history, mythology, philosophy, poetry,...
I guess "good or bad" depends on how you approach it and what you're expecting to get out of it.