Diesel,
I must disagree with much of what you say.
To expand, humans feel emotions almost always because of some action that has taken place that was previousy not known. Receiving a phone call about a friend dying iin a car accident would excite certain feelings inside of us all - and I'm sure you can agree.
I think this definition of emotion is wrong. You can have emotion about something even when you know what is going to happen. Say you are a sentimental person and you cry at a sad movie. Then you go to see it again and you cry again. The second time you went, you knew what was going to happen, and yet you still had new emotions about it. I have not really thought much about what causes emotion, but it is something a lot deeper than actions happening that were not previously known.
Thus, God can be omniscient, and also have emotions.
God, being all-good, by defenition cannot feel ANY "bad" or "evil" emotions since He is "all" good and "no" evil. If God does feel hate, for example, then He is breaching His omnibenevolent status. The God of the Bible has displayed many times that He is NOT all-good. Genocide, infanticide, pillaging, rape, torture, human sacrifice, pestilence, disease, etc have all been condoned (sometimes caused directly) by the God in the Bible. God also mentions many times that He "hates" such and such tribe of Isreal.
I'm not quite sure what you mean by omnibenevolence... do you mean God is love? Ok here is what Christian theology says. God is love, but God is also just. God loves people, but he must judge their sin or he would not be just. To solve this dilemma he sent Christ to take the punishment for our sins - his justice is complete and he can now love us because the barrier of sin has been removed.
Some people God chooses to judge after they die, others he judges in this life. Since all have sinned, all deserve to die. All of the examples you gave of God being not-good are actually the opposite. Justice is good, and God was giving out the punishments required by justice.
The idea that God has free will contradicts His omniscient status. For a being that knew all events as they would unfold past, present and future is bound by those events and is powerless to stop them from happening.
Whats this? The old predestination/free-will debate, but applied to God. Interesting... but it doesn't work.
God knows the past, present, and future because he choose, of his own free will, to create them. He is not controlled by them - he could change them if he wanted. It is perhaps comparable to a director making a movie. The director knows everything that will go on in the movie. But the director is not controlled by the movie - the movie is controlled by the director.
Awaiting your reply.
If you say there no absolutes, I ask you, are you absolutely sure?