Why did God choose to hate Esau yet love Jacob since both were in the womb, neither having done good nor evil? It was because Jacob was justified by Christ and Esau wasn't.
[Rom 9:13-15 KJV]
13 As it is written, Jacob have I loved, but Esau have I hated.
14 What shall we say then? [Is there] unrighteousness with God? God forbid.
15 For he saith to Moses, I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I will have compassion.
Yes, those not saved are greater in number than those saved. Why? Because the unsaved (as we all once were), were born in sin, but are not of those elected by God to be covered by Christ's offering for forgiveness of sin, and having sin, God's divine prerogative to hate them and not save them, the deserved condition we all would all find ourselves in were it not for His exceeding mercy and grace through Christ.
You obviously didn't read verse 2:1, did you, or, you didn't understand it: God did/does it all.
You are trying to change the meaning of 2:8 to accommodate your beliefs. It says no such thing as what you've stated
For it to mean what you said, it would be to force the verse to contradict itself - not possible.
Further, it places you in violation of Rev 22:18-19.
Anything that someone believes they must do to become saved no matter how slight it may seem to them,
nevertheless, means they are under the law of works, not grace.
Okay, I guess I understand your low opinion of God accurately.
Re "You are trying to change the meaning of 2:8 to accommodate your beliefs." I have explained how I harmonize Scripture, but here it is again:
My hermeneutic or parameters for
interpreting the Bible begins with the instruction of Paul (1THS 5:21) to “Test everything. Hold on to the good.” A truthseeker wants to know the truth, and
is guided by the question: What is most true or closest to the truth? The means of determining truth is subjective logic that is made as objective as possible by learning from other truthseekers, preferably via dialogue when possible.
As a result of seeking ultimate truth, I have come to value
two NT teachings as key points from which to triangulate or use to guide my interpretation of the Bible, especially problematic statements. First, God loves and wants to save everyone (1TM 2:3-4, JN 3:16); Christ died to show God’s love and the possible salvation of all (RM 5:6-8) including His enemies (ungodly, atheist, anti-Christ). Second, God is just (2THS 1:6a, cf. RM 3:25-26 & 9:14, DT 32:4, PS 36:6, LK 11:42, RV 15:3). Explanations of God’s Word should not impugn God’s justice and love for all people (JL 2:13, JN 3:16). I find this hermeneutic affirmed in the OT (PS 145:17): “The Lord is righteous in all his ways, and holy in all his works.” Triangulate from God’s love & justness.
This principle leads me to conclude that
even the wrath of God is an expression of His love and justice. The writer of Hebrews (12:4-11) indicates that divine wrath is intended as discipline or for the purpose of teaching people to repent of their hatefulness and faithlessness (PR 3:12, IS 33:14-15 RV 3:19). If a righteous explanation cannot be found for a passage of Scripture purporting to describe God’s will, then it should be considered as historical or descriptive of what people perceived rather than as pedagogical or prescriptive of God’s nature. Unrighteous rage should not be attributed to God.
The justice of God is a source of comfort and joy to those who have decided to accept His loving Lordship, but it is experienced as judgment or wrath by those who rebel against Him (IS 13:13, RM 1:18, RV 19:11). The fire that warms (purifies) also burns (punishes). Stating God’s requirement for salvation negatively: a person would do well (be wise) not to reject Him in order not to experience the miserable but just consequence (JN 3:17-18). Just consequences teach good behavior.
Other important elements in my hermeneutic include the following.
Everyone lives by fallible faith/belief/opinion and sufficient knowledge of evidence rather than by absolute certainty or proof or coercion (2CR 5:7). Second,
a logical train of thought leads an unbiased truthseeker to have a propensity to believe in an all-loving God, who is not tricky and does not hide the way to heaven (HB 11:6, ACTS 13:10). Third, humanity’s understanding of God evolved or progressed through the millenniums, so that
the OT was superseded by the NT, which is the apex of divine revelation (HB 7:18, 8:13, 9:15).
The method employed in this hermeneutic is additive or eclectic as taught by Paul (in 1THS 5:21), exemplified by Jesus (in MT 4:6-7) and illustrated by the transparent overlays of bodily systems found in some books on anatomy. I want to include all true assertions in the picture of reality without making a “Procrustean Body” by cutting off or ignoring parts that do not seem to fit, because the correct understanding must be self-consistent or else God would be tricky. The whole truth combines parts without sawing!