That's it really. If Sriram, Walt/Vlad, ... have experience of god, and it is something beyond words and logic - why spend hours, months, or years trying to (incorrectly) justify it as a rational entity based on rational arguments and philosophy.
Would be more credible if the effort was spent on improving the world directly or generating art, music or poetry.
It would help if there were some consistency in the theistic explanations offered by VG, Sriram, and Vlad (there's supposed to be a discipline (phenomenology) to help sort out things like this. As it is we have a supremely dogmatic approach exemplified by Vlad, based ultimately on his first 'encounter', of which he has made much, in a typical 'one size fits all approach'. His tersely expressed anecdote is typical:
When you encounter God you are in the presence of the Judge and there is no intellectual weighing up of God's goodness or holiness only surrender to a new relationship...or flight.
Sriram's approach is also rather dogmatic, often summarised in such words as "if you haven't had the experience, you wouldn't understand", and yet he has also related how he felt aware of the presence of God from his earliest years, which seems to suggest he felt as if he were one of the 'chosen', and perhaps other people who don't have this experience are deliberately blocking it out by over-intellectualising (Vlad, of course, would call this 'God-dodging', a concept I've always found laughable, when applied to my own life). But he's made it clear that his concept of the divine is different from the Christian one, and has castigated his critics for trying to apply the concepts of the Christian god to his own beliefs.
VG's approach is refreshingly mild and well-reasoned, and she found no real sympathy with Vlad's seemingly frightening experience of God as the Divine Judge. No doubt such experiences are not unknown in Islam - Mohammed's original experience of the Archangel Gabriel was apparently the most terrifying of his life up to that point, experiencing a being "whose form filled the whole horizon" (VG will have to tell us whether this description is considered the authentic account of Mohammed).
I have stated several times on this forum that I was always a 'seeker' until about my 50th year, when I decided it was all a wild goose chase. And I'd had a few 'experiences' in different contexts which were very disturbing, one at the age of eleven, when under the brainwashing of the Jehovah's Witnesses, I had a 'revelation' about human history and the truth of the Bible in explaining it. The second important one was as a young adult (I've related this to Sriram) when I 'went East' and did a lot of meditating. Yup, I thought I'd met God for a time.
They're just experiences, and in my opinion don't make a very good guide to life (particularly if you have a Jehovah's Witness conversion experience).