Well, I agree on one point, that is that if God wants to punish someone, let him do it. We don't live in ancient Israel with divine laws that are enforced by the nation and its justice system.
While there are many times I would love to dictate what I would like God to do for me, I realize that is not the kind of genie, God, we have. I have also through scripture, and life, seen that God is perfectly just. That does not mean that bad things do not happen to me, on the contrary.
However, your idea that (if I understand what you said) that God is incapable of acting and doing things physical in our reality, you will find this seriously wrong, and this concept can only come if you disregard all of Israel's history, and that prior to Israel.
Again, it is your right. But, if an ant made itself an enemy of mine, I would squash it. Hope you realize who the ant is - metaphorically speaking. Of course, if you believe not in God, you will take your chances.
Well from a theological standpoint, a question rises in asking what if it's really the other way around?
I mean look closely, here we have a God actively doing all sorts of horrible, and terrifying things to people in most of the storyline that don't believe in him and yet says that he's good and righteous.
On the other hand, Satan is another deity on the scene who hasn't really murdered anybody out of his own accord or displayed anger in the Bible narratives worthy of note along the same lines as God's well known multiple acts of genocide and extreme brutality by his followers not only on to others, but to themselves as well. Satan nonetheless gets labeled as being evil, a liar, and a murder when the Bible has very little to say in way of Satan's actions themselves in a spectacular contrast.
People do say within Abrahamic religion that life's a test by God, so maybe it's a test to see if they can distinguish truly for themselves what deity is good and what deity is bad when coerced to follow the one labeled as righteous when in fact the narratives indicates that at it's core the most powerful deity is actually evil.
If I was still theist, I might have just as well had exercised blind faith "against my better judgement" and chose to forray with Satan who in the Bible's narratives had invoked nowhere near the capacity of brutality and terror at the "Hands of an angry God".
Maybe that great leap of faith with one risking all means something different in the context that you ought to leap against the grain of what is being said and reinforced to you, in spite of a punitive barrier that keeps you corralled in by fear. Such as hell internal punishments excetera.
I've heard some alternate branches of Christianity have developed the opinion that God and Satan are actually both conducting a great test together as a team, to see and test the capabilities of Mankind's capability for self discernment with people who decide to go against an malevolent authority figure portrayed as being good when it's actions show clearly the opposite, versus a benevolent authority figure touted as being evil and murderous whereas it's actions show the opposite, and then seeing if threats of things like hell and internal damnation would sway people in one direction or the other based on what either they were told, or freelee using their own discernment to decide for themselves what and who is actually evil and what and who is actually good.
I don't know what this group was called, but if there wasn't any such group around, I would have probably started my own religion on that basis during that time as I still believed in deities back then.