Ok well your questions more clear, so i can actually answer them. Did you find a google translator from unintelligible to English or something? Not sure how your questions are equivalent to his, but ok.
Because we explain things in terms of other things we understand. Solving a mystery by appealing to another mystery is fallacious. Its equivalent to saying magic explains the universe. Its meaningless and useless. The God i'm referring to is the typical theistic God. This God is typically presumed to be maximally powerful, supernatural, is outside of space and time, is the foundation of morality and the laws of logic, etc. Modern monotheism has a general God definition.
A supernatural entity cannot serve as an explanation for anything.
I'm not quite sure whats so difficult. Most other people understand what i'm saying as well as the general concept of God i'm referring to. I also never said God doesn't exist. I don't know if God exists. I would also say that God can't be an explanation of abstract things like government, morality, or the laws of logic. This question is hypothetical; its saying that the existence of God cannot be an explanation for anything.
Actually, Im not most. I wasnt raised religious, indoctrinated, nor in a christian god-area. The only gods (not god I know of from Hindu and Abrahamic is here. But even then google, I looked-Im not is sillymy words) focus towards one god.
If you mean abrahamic, do you mean like casper of some sort? If a spirit, a disembodied person? Arahamics can explain it to an extent but then it ends God is greater than ourselves; he is an essense, we dont know his nature, etc. So if they dont know, how would people opposed to their belief know?
The closest I understand of god-going by what all gods religion have in common, some to one extent others to another, is they are all something one worships or singles out as something important. Many are considered a spirit, or I guess, a force that is all things. Others see it as caspor while others make life a person to interact with it.
God, when seeing what most have in common, is energy-literal, physical energy. Within that energy, anthrom* or not, is a sense of gratitude and wellbeing. A holistic aura and eurphia state of mind It helps one be aware of ones place in life and hope for continuation in life. Its (not him, her), it is life. Ones breathe is a part of it.
As for any other version outside context as above, I dont know. God must be seen in context of people and culture; what do they have in common and how does it connect (from a less literal point of view) to the outside world and the physical and scientific explanations of the world such as breathing.
But a deity, spirit, or incarnation god? That, how does a non-believer talk about it, when the believers cant explain its nature themselves?