Question is pretty straightforward: Why is the God of the Old Testament so different from the God of the New Testament?
It seems like in the OT God is a little bit meaner, he favors the Jews over all other ethnicities to the point of killing other groups of people, destroys cities and even almost the entire population at one point, and just in general is more of a God to worship out of fear than love? And then you come to the New Testament and God all of the sudden loves all humans (not just the Jews), spreads a message of totally loving your enemies and turning the other cheek, and all that?
Anyone who reads the Bible cover to cover with any sense of proportion comes up with this sort of question. It is important to remember that the Bible is a
collection of books selected from a huge number that were all used by Christians in the early days of the Church. How these were selected and why, and how they came to be held in the regard they are, is a study in itself, leading to even more questions, faithful or not!
The simplest way to see this, might for some, be to understand that these are
stories about God written in accord with the understanding of the many authors of their different times and circumstances. Even if the claim to inspiration is made, it is evident that inspiration if filtered by the mind and knowledge of the inspiree, and is not a direct dictation or transmission. If it was, why are there so many versions of each? So the place holder word “God” (Don’t forget, they didn’t have capital letters, punctuation or even vowels, or spaces between words) is far more about the authors and translators than about the purity of Diety as such. Some even argue that the “authority” of God was used, as it is today by many of many religions, to legitimize an agenda.
A wonderful book, although it is old, that has been used in the comparative religion clases of several religions, including some Catholic, is Gina Cermiara’s
Insights for the Age of Aquarius; a handbook for religious sanity. I know, wretched title, but the premise of the book is sound, functional, and endorsed by many faith leaders of the time. Worth checking out. Our multi-faith book club is reading it now, and many revealing, useful, and barrier dissolving ideas have been brought forth and embraced.