The God of the Old Testament had a hell of a temper. Turning people into pillars of salt ? Surrounding city walls with trumpets and crashing those walls down on those inside ? Sending people to hilltops to sacrifice their children via a slashed throat and only when this was imminent did God relent and say, ' Oh, ok ... you don't really have to do it. It's good enough that you were prepared to '. Oh yeah -- God was bloodthirsty, vengeful, petty, biased, etc. That's if you're referring to the OT God
Maybe you're referring to Christ, though ? Well Christ had a temper on him too, remember -- taking his whip to the money-lenders in the temple - overturning their money tables - cursing them to hell and telling them they were the children of Satan who would never see God's kingdom. Guess mercy and forgiveness were off the table for them, huh ?
In fact, the entire concept of Hell denies the mercy and forgiveness ideals
So yes, God and Christ have demonstrated rage and anger. As in Heaven above, so on Earth below, huh ?
Nature abhors waste, it's said. If we accept that, we must accept that righteous indignation is inherent, is hard-wired, is a fundamental element of the human experience. If righteous indignation had no survival value, Nature would have eliminated it from humankind eons ago
Therefore, the righteous indignation, rage and sense of injustice being expressed by so many re: the jury's verdict can only be regarded as 'natural', as 'human', as valid - and as such, must be accepted and respected (imo)
Edit: Oh, and by the way, if ' God didn't wish harm to come to others' as you claim -- then there would never have been one war, one murder - and Caylee wouldn't have been murdered, would she ?