Dear Void,
I had all the same questions as you and more. I couldn't understand a God that would kill his son, granted Jesus went to his death voluntarily. I was brought up un a New England wasp context which was very much against women. I don't think there is another place in the US that ever burned women as witches. Imagine what effect that had on their daughters down the generations.
The form of hatred and maybe fear of women that came down to me was, 'Eve got Adam kicked out of the garden, so let's all get little Eve' That didn't bring me any closer to God.
The western Christian world believes in original sin is a result of the fall. The ancient faith I follow now has a different view. Eve was young and was begiled by the snake. Adam went along. God made them leave to protect them from being tempted by the tree of immortality. He made clothes for them and told how they would need to live outside the garden. They left the garden so that sin would not become immortal but would die at the end of each person's life(I'm not thinking here about intergeneration family abuse).
St. Athanasius of Alexandria (300's AD/CE) wrote a wonderful book about the incarnation and suffering . His refrain throughout is, "God being a good God, What was God to do?" Each paragraph bemoans the plight of humankind with a section on war, a section of murder, theivery, prostitutionand on and on. Each time the same refrain, "God, being a good God, what was God to do?" Problem for me ---I didn't know what good meant. If each hard thrust of a rape of a child is accompanied by the man saying, "Good girl, good girl,good girl" Good become the ability to bear pain and fear.... St. Athanatsius describes why it befits the dignity of humankind that Jesus should become one of us and show us what good was supposed to be. O.K. that was a start.
As for sin, we believe that we are born into a fallen and sinful world. Our suffering comes right along with it. The greatest and most God like quality of being human is our freewill. Since God is love(didn't get that one yet) he would never force us to love him. We needed to come to him of our own freewill. Freewill is so important to God that he will never force anyone to love him or step in to change any person's behavior. So those people who hurt us had freewill and chose to use it for harm....There is a line in the Bible about God shining on the just and the unjust. God is the same creator of both of them, also made in the image of God.
Because we don't believe in original sin as something we inherit down the generations, we see the Virgin Mary differently too. For us, she was born of a good normal mother who conceived her in the natural way.
She is fully human therefore she could give Jesus human his body and his blood. Now that began to make sense to me. She was much more approachable to me than a male figure at that point.
The Nicene creed and the Apostles creed are earliest creeds, still said by most christians today. Most important to those creeds is the belief that Jesus was fully man and fully God .He lived on earth and died the only way a God can die, by giving up his life voluntarily. He choose the most humiliating death so no one's death there after would be without divine blessing. We sing that 'hell cries out groaning, why was I tricked into letting this man come down here.' Jesus went down to hell to set all the captives of death free. Overcoming all death by his own death and by his resurrection made a way to eternal life for us.
I gradually felt my points of view towards God changing. Therapy taught me I didn't deserve what I got and it wasn't my purpose in life.That is what this faith tradition believes-we are all born innocent and good made in the image of God. Now I can accept that I am loveable and can understand that God loves right exactly where I am, in the pit of dispair or on level ground (it doesn't stay level for long)
So yes, my trauma has changed how I understand God now, not as filliocidal maniac, who never seems to do us any earthly good as in didn't 'stop it'. I see him as the gentle protector of our souls. The perps could steal and break all of the rest of our bodies and minds, but they couldn't corrupt our souls.... Karl Jung said,"Bidden or unbidden, God is there."
The best part of it for me is that even when I feel totally alone, I'm not because God is there. To paraphrase Psalm 23, God is my shepard, I shall not want ( He will fill the emptyness inside me so that I will never live in unrequited longing ever again.)