Again, "I will begin by assuming god does not exist and that we are merely examining the concept of god."
This thread has never been an academic examination of concepts of god. From the very first post, it's been the assertion that even if God doesn't exist (and it was assumed rhetorically that he doesn't), it's still necessary that people believe that God exists (in the form of an omniscient observer), in order for their consciences to fully develop. Then you proceeded, at the bottom of your first post, to tell us that's why it's reasonable that good people should distrust and even discriminate against atheists, because by your lights atheists are people with stunted and disfunctional consciences.
So your insistence on ONE specific god is not generally representative. As this is a science forum and I have specified abstract concept, it should be obvious that the general theological attributes apply
Theology takes place within religious traditions, whose presuppositions theology typically takes as given and a-priori.
Your point would be stronger if it used the phrase 'philosophy of religion'. The philosophy of religion differs most noticeably from theology in that it doesn't grant priority to revelation. There's less emphasis on ensuring that the results of argument remain within the boundaries of orthodox religious tradition.
But here in the West, most of the concepts and presuppositions of the philosophy of religion are still derived from the Christian tradition, the culture in which the philosophy of religion developed. The philosophy of religion is still primarily concerned with the existence of the "Abrahamic" monotheistic 'God' figure. It examines the traditional 'theistic proofs', the 'problem of evil', and so on. So in real life the philosophy of religion still overlaps a great deal with philosophical theology. In particular, it's still assumed that 'God' has the kind of attributes that Christian tradition has given it.
It's only comparatively recently that the philosophy of religon has started expanding its scope to consider ideas derived from non-"Abrahamist" traditions and from other historical periods.
The fact that you apparently want to limit the discussion to a specifically Abrahamic god simply illustrates that your arguments cannot be applied to the general concept of god (you know, the one actually discussed in the OP).
In an earlier post, I pointed out that many cultures don't have omniscient gods. Gods often work at cross purposes and even trick each other. As I recall, your response was something to the effect that these were early prototypic god concepts that had yet to reach their full development. So you clearly have some paradigmatic image in your mind of what "the general concept of god" should ideally be. And that seems to be something along the lines of the "Abrahamic" idea, a single personalized monotheistic god with a bunch of "omni" attributes. The relevant one in this thread is omniscience.
If we look at religious ideas around the world, throughout history, things are more diverse than that. There's monotheism and polytheism in no end of different varieties. There are transcendent divinities and immanent divinities. There are personal divinities and impersonal divinities. God is thought to be knowable and god is thought to be unknowable. It's all over the map.
What we find is that mankind's ideas of divinities are relative to the religious traditions that generated them. We sometimes forget that, since both Islam and Christianity have spread the "Abrahamic" group of ideas all across the planet by colonialism and conquest. People sometimes assume that the "Abrahamic" version is the only one there is, or at least the best and most developed, the yard-stick that all other ideas of divinity are measured by.
The Bible was written by men, from the perspective of men, so god would tend to be anthropomorphized.
Anthropomorphism isn't just imagining God with arms and legs, occupying a human-like body. Imagining God as a subjective personality like ourselves, a being that's conscious, that knows, and forms judgements, is anthropomorphic too, only now the anthropomorphism is psychological instead of physical.