While I believe God is indeed "bigger" than any virus, I also believe that we live in a fallen/corrupted world, where there is suffering and pain. If you're a "Bible person" there are many many places in the Bible that talk about how both good and bad fortunes fall on both the "righteous and unrighteous" - your circumstance, cause of death, etc. doesn't have anything to do with "how well you follow the religion.*"
The lessons I take from this are all pretty basic: be a good steward, which includes being sensibly hygienic. Care for your neighbor, which means not encouraging your neighbors to do foolish things. Don't have any idols, including your own sense of self-righteousness.
It looks (from the outside) like you took some good lessons from the virus, then tried to connect them to doctrine. There are plenty of lessons about hygiene in the Bible which are a closer fit than the call for stewardship... They're largely about ritual uncleanness though and seem a bit primitive (and sexist) in a modern context. Humility is also a (concerningly) strong Biblical theme without involving idolatry.
"Love thy neighbor" is hard to argue with, though. The original meaning of it applying to one's tribe is dicier, but post-translation it's a good rule.
*Which, incidentally, is why the Christian gospel is "good news" - there's no hoops to jump through. Just simple faith. (The argument that "faith" is a hoop to jump through is a specious one.)
I still fail to understand what this means. How am I expected to have faith in something I don't believe? How can I believe something without being convinced with evidence, which would be "testing God" and removing the need for faith?
There are ideas I have faith in that I can't argue for, but they're social values that seem to come from my parents or common human nature. I tried to find belief in Jesus in those basic feelings, but it's not there. I'm not an ex-Christian, but I've wanted to be Christian pretty badly.
So I don't know what my path to simple faith is even supposed to be. Meditating/prayer with an open heart until the truth is privately revealed to me? I've tried that many times, and gotten a *lot* of potential conflicting "truths", which doesn't help me. It appears that many very intelligent people choose a truth in that manner, but they don't choose the same thing.
I've also read the Bible (which isn't simple, particularly if I need to truly understand it). It didn't convince me of the goodness or existence of God, I'll leave it at that. I can imagine somehow becoming a Christian someday, but not defending the Bible as true or good.