Of course, it all makes sense! If the sun is made of concentrated God love, then clearly that must mean that God's love manifests as hydrogen, which is indeed heavily concentrated in stars and that's what allows nuclear fusion to take place. But the sun also has non-negligible amounts of helium, which is what hydrogen turns into after fusion, so that must mean that God's love is also helium. Which makes sense, hydrogen is just a proton, an electron, maybe one or two neutrons, the same component parts of helium. If all these are God's love, we can extend the principle to show that everything composed of atoms is God's love.
But the common saying is that God is love, so the distinction seems odd. God's love is God itself, then, so we must deduce that atomic matter is in fact God. Atomic matters being almost everything we encounter in our lives, the inescapable conclusion is that Ray Comfort is trying to convert us to an odd variation on the theme of pantheism, where God is not everything but close enough for most purposes.
So I'm God.
Well they do say that humans have been made in God's image. Maybe this simply refers to the fact that all living things have been made from the atom's that -as Sigmaleph explained- are God's manifestation.
And that why God is omnipresent.
Also, does this mean that the "anti-Christ" simply refers to anti-matter? Or are there beings made from anti-matter that are by their very existence living in opposition to God? I guess that means that finding the anti-Christ, if he does appear amongst us, won't be difficult. Dude will just blow up and turn into energy when he gets too close to Earth.