I recently said in a comment: "...But the god in question condones obviously evil practices like slavery."
The reply I recieved was: "Provided you demonstrate why slavery is evil, maybe I'll agree with you."
I just want to be clear on this, the way you christians see an issue is that it is morally good by default if god said it is. There is no actual need to justify why logically, it is good because god is good, hence it is necessarily good (basically circular reasoning based on christian theological claims).
This can be expanded to any topic you prefer based on the god of the bible; killing babies, genocide, etc.
It always appeared to me that there are two possibilities:.
Christians have thought about what is considered good and determined it through logic and evidence that it is in fact good...and this matches gods teachings.
Whatever god said is good is necessarily good, and being able to make sense of why is largely optional.
I would have placed everyone but perhaps some biblical literalists in the former category...but based on what I keep seeing said on the internet (but never in real life...no one ever seems to want to attach their names to defending slavery in the bible) this is not a valid view on Christians.
It seems like many more maintstream christians take the stance that the bible is the authority, what god says in it is true and atheists who want to disagree better come to the conversation with some brillant justifications for why the bible should not be accepted without any actual contemplation.
In order words...christians seem to believe that the bible is right until proven wrong...and even then it is not wrong but the teaching is misunderstood.
Is my view fair? Why or why not? And do Christians think they should give the bible this benefit of the doubt? And do atheists think it is acceptable to defer to the authority of the bible in this way?