This is totally based on the western tradition of interpreting Aristotle's the "unmoved mover" theory of god. ie, god as omnipotent.

The Pagan god Balder, (alt Baldr), what could he do that was so special? As far as I know it was nothing. He had ordinary human powers, he was just good at them. Like Batman. God is an extremely wide and I'd dare say has a limitless scope. It doesn't even need people worshipping him. Loki's the prime example of that one.

Pantheists believe god is the naturalist and very much un-supernatural known universe. It's the worlds fastest growing religion today.

Hindu's don't share this world view at all.

This is all philosophic and theological theories from two centuries ago. I would have thought/hoped we, (as in humanity) should have moved on by now. It's a very ethno-centric way to see philosophic thought.

I'm not saying we shouldn't believe this god theory. But it's far from the only one.

There's also the issue with mysticism. It's only one part of Christianity that believes the nature of God can be reasoned about. Mystics argue it is impossible to understand God and to reason about it is heresy. Which was pretty much the all pervasive attitude until the Gnostics broke the tradition.

And this idea is still around. The ancient mystic phrase, "God works in mysterious ways" is still used today.

religion doesn't have to make sense or be logical. Not on any level. We cannot demand this of believers.