People have an instinctual desire to believe that there is a reason for things; because if there is a reason for things then you can appeal to that reason and change things.
The idea tha things are random, that you have absolutely zero control over the world around you, is a very scary idea, to some the thought that a meteor could simply fall from the sky and we would all die for no reason whatsoever, pure random chance, is enough to give them nightmares.
God acts like a safety blanket; when something horrible happens it's alright, as bad as it was, there was a reason for it. God puts a nice warm human face on what is otherwise a cold and uncaring universe.
It's not a desire for God, it's a desire for protection.
And, as for me, I feel happier thinking that if a meteor fell from the sky it was because it had always been destined to do so, though standard causality, and the fact that it did was because nobody knew about it (or, if they did, knew how to stop it) due to the the way that the universe works in getting information (and capabilties) into the hands of the deterministic 'agents' that compose mankind.
I don't think it would help me to know (however one might do so) that there was a supreme being who let it happen, even caused it. It would have to have a very good "This was the only way[1] that <something good> could happen" for me to consider it justifiable.
A deterministic universe with a merely incalculable future works better for me.
[1] In an omnipotent being, this would be a rather weak excuse. I mean look at the concept of the biblical Deluge. Those not in the ark (presumably the only boat of all kinds of others already in existence capable of surviving that long) all drowned/starved/died of sub-bleached thirst, did they? Or were they whisked off into an appropriate afterlife (which, given how only Noah and his associated clan were deemed 'savable' would be at most a form of limbo)? Couldn't everyone but Noah have just been plucked out of existence without the flood happening? Or subjected to some appropriate form of local death if the vengeful JHVH had decided to do so, saving the trouble of actually drowning the world. Now, if it was a necessary task that Noah go ahead and create the Ark, it could have been any task. And could still have included picking and choosing two/seven of every animal as 'special' (for the ominipotent being to spare from the animal culling as well... don't forget the killing of the overwhelming majority of all that wildlife, if it was a worldwide flood). At the very least He could have plucked the 'worthy' from the Earth, deep-frozen the rest, recreated the planet according to current design specs and plonked the 'saved' down on it. Although, come to think of it, that sounds like a Dan Brown-like treatment of the Flood, and thus possibly a good premise for a book. (If you don't want to argue that this is probably what
actually happened, but to the understanding of Noah & Co's decendents it got morphed into the Flood myth.)