What you seem to be saying here is that the collection of all ontologically necessary things "are" God, but this is just a romanticized version of pantheism.
What I am trying to say is that all these ontologically necessary things(maybe called definitions) come from one common source, that being existence. Admittedly you point out a big problem that philosophers have attempted to explain for ages. And that is, to make the Creator or God both transcendental and imminent at the same time. In Christian metaphysics the point at which ontological mind stuff becomes cosmological is the point in time of creation.
yet here I am: an atheist which agrees logic is ontologically necessary. I haven't contradicted myself, so I'm still not understanding exactly what your point is.
And here you are, at the beginning of all things where one must choose between many conflicting things whether you are an atheist or a theist. Did absolute being create the cosmological world by separating into real cosmological things by his ontological way of thinking things into existence? Or, do we want to have a faith, which says something came from nothing? The latter is too big of a jump in logic for me.
Atheist, however, make this jump in logic all the time and think it is a safe assumption. As they say, some atheist do not believe their is a God or an Absolute. Some believe there is only one absolute and that is that there are no absolutes. I am sure you have heard that. So, do you contradict yourself or do you simply refuse to recognize creation? If you do not believe that something can come from nothing, do you not discover that God is the great "I am"? This also is the Bible's take on creation. In Genesis 1, the Bible opens with "in the beginning God created" and in the Gospel of John says the "
logos became flesh."
They call it God, I call it "the universe." Likewise in this scenario, you seem to be calling it God, while I just call it "logic."
Considering
logos, logic, and pure reasoning,etc., the above statement appears to be an admission with a small semantic nuance. Is a rose a rose called by another name?
For instance, logic is not a creator-being, nor is it omnipotent or omniscient or anything like that. This is further evidence if you ask me that God is not just a collection of ontologically necessary things. It seems they are separate concepts, and it's wholly rational to acknowledge the necessary existence of logic while lacking belief in god(s).
The proposition that God created does not say that God is a collection of eternal things, but if something does not come from nonexistence, then the Creatormust have left us with a collection of eternal truths like logic and science. It seems very rational to say if one believes there is truth in the universe, then there is a God. Also, the fact that the same science and logic on earth works throughout the universe, it is reasonable to assume this speaks to the
Omani of God. But clearly God is separated from his creation.