Merry Christmas!
I get that, Bohandas, but there's the objection of arguing by semantics. Which applies to both cases, but from what I know, most ideas of the Christian god define 'good' as 'close to god'. What he says, you do. That is good, by definition. Which is bizarre to us, but not necessarily to them. Or in other words; [what it looks like from outside is] we're using a word we picked out/that's meant as short-hand, not as literal description to describe someone else's belief system and god, and then complaining when they don't fit that word.
A far stronger argument, in my opinion, is that an omniscient, omnibenevolent God wants to maximize the end-utility of the world. If 'omnipotent' does not actually mean 'able to break the way reality works'; that is to say, God cannot undo himself, or make a square circle, or bypass cause->effect. If you take this view of it, then it's essentially the 'all part of God's plan'. Things can have consequences so far reaching and unknowable that only God can nudge them in just such a way as to both allow us to believe ourselves free willed (if we didn't, we'd all go insane, I wager), and yet it will still result in the greatest good overall. Evil can exist, but it does so in the service of a greater good.
I mean, the argument that 'glorification of god' is a crappy greater good is an entirely separate issue. But internal consistency can be had, particularly if you apply the Principle of Charity.
Speaking of which, since religion and spirituality aren't all that divorced from philosophy, and for atheists/agnostics they fill the same role, what are people's opinions about wireheading? Is it genuine happiness to be hooked up to a machine that continually stimulates your pleasure centers, all of your physical needs taken care of? Or to go into a perfect virtual reality, but you never actually interact with other human beings, just simulations of them (you cannot tell the difference from within the machine, of course), and is a paradise for you?