Your question is fundamentally flawed. People change, and God certainly changed as the Bible progressed.
Perhaps God's actions simply were a reflection of the barbarism he had to deal with.
If God didn't change, reality would be static. I don't think you understand that there is a narrative that always pushes reality forwards. A huge chapter of that narrative is quite close to completion. Buckle up!
But to answer your question, no, God doesn't change.
And so you think God wants blood sacrifice in the Third Temple?
Is God still asking for sacrifices of living beings today? Since it's the same terrible Jewish religion and all.
Do people change?
Is God a person?
Your question is fundamentally flawed. People change, and God certainly changed as the Bible progressed.
Perhaps God's actions simply were a reflection of the barbarism he had to deal with.
If God didn't change, reality would be static. I don't think you understand that there is a narrative that always pushes reality forwards. A huge chapter of that narrative is quite close to completion. Buckle up!
But to answer your question, no, God doesn't change.
The ultimate paradox, really. God does and doesn't change.
Reality is both predestination and free will. Evolution and intelligent design go hand in hand.
There's a lot of things that people see as contravening each other, but I don't think it's really like that so much.