This strikes me as a retreat from discussion. The goodness or otherwise of God is not, it seems to me, Primarily atheist discussion and you have reverted IMO to the old “Oh, well, I don’t believe in it anyway”.
The discussion we were having was God cannot be all good and all loving or even God is the God of Killing and torture discuss.
You also asked me to solve the so called problem of evil only to immediately fall back on Oh I don’t believe in it anyway.
Not really sure what point Gordon or any other atheist is trying to make about the problem of evil.
Let's assume that the point trying to be made here is that if theists believe in a god that is omnipotent so has the ability to cure a child with cancer, and they also believe in a god that is "omnibenevolent", then no such god can exist because the only possible interpretation of "onmibenevolent" has to be curing children with cancer if you have the power to do it. That's one way of looking at the meaning of "onmibenevolent", but given it's an abstract concept, it's not the only interpretation of "onmibenevolent" - not sure what you think the Christian take is on it?
From my understanding of the English meaning of the Arabic used in the Quran, the equivalent there in describing Allah is "Ar-Rahman" and "Ar-Raheem". Obviously as the Quran is poetry it's an illustration or idea about a god in poetic terms for people to understand the philosophical concept.
"Ar-Rahman" means "the most merciful" and the linguistic structure in Arabic indicates the mercy is happening in the present rather than that the mercy is continuous for all-time.
"Ar-Raheem" linguistically implies the attribute or capacity for perpetual mercy but not necessarily that the mercy is happening in the present.
I don't take the view from the above Arabic descriptions of Allah, that there are any undertakings or promises that I or anyone else never has any pain or problems. I think how we deal with problems and pain (ours and that of other people) can change who we are and our moral values and so has an intellectual / emotional /"spiritual" effect that could have substantial value - how substantial depends on the person - some people may not think the intellectual/ emotional/ "spiritual" aspect of consciousness has as much value as the physical.
I don't take the view that if Allah does not take away everyone's pain and problems, such a god is not worth praying to. But that's up to the individual to decide whether or not prayer benefits them.
Will wait for an atheist to clarify what "the problem of evil" means to them.