That was the quite the rollercoaster of a comment. I'm trying to track the parts of your analogy, though.
Is the "Son" supposed to be Jesus or humanity in general? Why would a father want to destroy his child or his handiwork? If God's experiment goes wrong, he can always create a new one. He's omnipotent so there's no effort involved. Neither would God react to failure in such a childish way by destroying things in a fit of resentment. Why would a parent be surprised when a child acts recklessly? Is God supposed to be an imbecile? And why would God be "helpless" in watching his child ruin Creation? Didn't God intervene with miracles, according to theists?
So I'm not sure exactly what point you're trying to make. Are you saying Revelation is on the right track since it depicts God's anger at us for abusing the world?