No, actually, like everything you say, it's backwards. Let's think about this, shall we?
Your view: The "being" responsible for everything that exists, and whom still plays an active and supervisory role cares about everything each of us does every minute of our lives. We will be rewarded or punished after our earthly death.
The naturalist's view: All living creatures have evolved from a long lineage of previous spcies over billions of year. We're not sure how it all started, but we have a few reasonable theories that might exlpain it, and we'll probably have more evidence in the future to narrow down the plausible theories for that. The result of this process has been agency, conciousness, and in humans only so far, metacognition, allowing us to grasp concepts as time and morality. After our death, sadly for our living loved ones, we will decay and contribute our part back into the cycle of life as all previous beings have done before us. Our wonderful human experience of emotions and companionship with other humans and creatures is precious to us while we live, and is fondly remembered by those who live after us.
Care to tell me how my version counters the ToE MoF? Care to "demolish" this like you have carbon dating and the sequence of fossil depositions in the geological column?