Harmonious, I'm snipping some from the response for brevity. I did read all of it, and if you feel I trim anything that's important please let me know.
Okay. We will get back to some of either my post or yours at a later time.
Ok, and I do understand that you're not God and don't know the mind of God -- but the purpose of my questions aren't for you to explain God's actions but rather to point out an inconsistency in believing God is something we can understand to be "benevolent."
See, here is the thing. The belief system involved covers more things than even I am aware of. I am more than willing to say that any seeming inconsistencies I see are from MY lack of understanding than an actual inconsistency.
Greater heads than mine have thought more deeply on points in the Torah than I can fathom. Your pointing out the fact that there are things "I don't get" doesn't tell me that there is something wrong with my belief system, or with God, but with my understanding of either God or the law.
Also, I believe that God is benevolent, and I also believe that God understands great truths about humanity that we just don't take into consideration. There might be justice happening that we don't know about because we didn't see the deception, or the mitigating circumstances.
God sees all, and God knows all.
So... You are asking me to judge God because YOU see slavery (as neither you nor I could think of a different social issue that was changed so dramatically) as inconsistent with what you perceive as right and wrong. (I happen to agree with you, but I don't agree with your conclusions.)
At the start of the Penitential Season, when we know that God is set to Judge humanity for our deeds, our sins, and our fortunes over the course of the following year, judging God doesn't seem to be the thing to do.
My question here is: okay, if circumcision wasn't a big deal because it had been a "family tradition" since Abraham, why not make opposition to slavery a "family tradition" since Abraham?
I don't know. I wasn't there when the conversation happened.
If I was, maybe I could offer an explanation. But I don't know the answer to your question. I can tell you what is. I can even tell you what WAS. I can't tell you WHY this and not that.
I thought I did explain that.
Benevolent beings don't fail to denounce wicked things; then turn around and indirectly condone them by applying some mild restrictions on them. That just tells people, "Hey, those guys are doing this terrible thing wrong, but if you do it THIS way it's not wrong."
And Omniscient beings understand how to convey information and what will actually be accepted by the people said Being is communicating with.
See... This isn't going to work. You don't give God the benefit of the doubt, assuming you know better than God how to run His world. You are asking me to adopt your lack of confidence in my belief system because you have questions.
I can explain the what. I can sometimes explain the how. But I can't explain the why, and that seems to be the point you are driving home, even though I've repeatedly told you I don't KNOW the why.
God knows humans better than either you or I do. He knows: He created us, He programmed us, and He understands our motivations and our levels of understanding.
You don't see it that way. I respect that.
This is what the rest of the response ultimately boils down to (though I note your arguments about the difference in harshness of slavery and such -- I'm not ignoring that, just don't want this discussion to get totally sidetracked).
Good.
That's fair enough -- I agree that if God exists and possesses omniscience that I couldn't expect any fallible mortal to understand God's mind -- but I think a disparity between our perception of what is benevolent/malevolent and how God behaves becomes a very serious issue for which "knowing the mind of God" isn't necessary.
If God behaves in a way that's apparently malevolent yet we try to use special pleading fallacies to make an exception for God (citing His ineffable magnitude of x attributes, e.g. of knowledge, power, goodness, perfection, etc.), then we are engaging ultimately in self-refuting nonsense: we've left the realm of reason, as is the case with any fallacy's use.
You know...
I can tell you that I've read stories that explain how what seems cruel at one moment might not be if we understood everything in the Big Picture that only God knows and understands. I also understand that if you aren't interested in understanding what I'm saying, you can poke a hole in any story or parable I would choose to bring.
I wouldn't say that we have left the realm of reason. I would rather say, in the words of the great Chofetz Chaim (translated to English, of course): For those who believe, there are no questions. For those who refuse to believe, there are no answers.