Of course. But the issue is when people consider God to be a being and not "the Being" itself. I know what you mean by the way. God as the fabric of reality, the substrate of existence, etc. And that's more in view of how I consider the concept of God should be. Not God as a being.
But the issue is when we talk about the Theistic God, which is a being rather than the substrate of being. The Theistic God is a personal creator of sorts that wants, things, reasons, do, act, talks, etc, and is separated from nature. A God as a substrate of being is never separated from existence or nature but is very much part of the nature. Nature, evolution etc, is God's nature in that instance. But back again to the Theistic God, that God doesn't have a part of this world, but is outside, external to this world. That kind of God, this dualistic type of God, can't be omnipotent and be without want and then have to create a universe to fulfill a want that he doesn't have. The only thing a creature like that would be missing is unpredictability and lack of power.
So the thing, the kind of God that Richard Parker and I were thinking of is the dualistic, external Theistic God, who is also supposed to be all-powerful and have no wants, but still somehow have a want for a Universe. That's the dilemma we were hammering out.
In other words, I have no problem with other views of God, other types of descriptions of God, but that wasn't the issue here.
In any discussion, and I fail this quite a bit, the participants have to agree on the definitions that they're working out from. Otherwise how can you discuss the color of a Zchwazbatch from the planet Blarghurg unless you have decided on what it is first. It doesn't mean that you therefore believe such a thing to exist, but for the sake of discussion, you can have a working description, a term dictionary during the discussion that's temporarily agreed upon during the discussion.