Well, at first, I would take a charitable view, that it's done as a mistake, or it's a kind of internet casual thing about accuracy, but when it is so consistent, and so often corrected, but to no avail. It must be conscious.
I'm curious where it comes from. Possibly some Christians ministers give dishonest views of non-Christians or atheists, or maybe some books. It is quite systematic, but as I said some Christians don't do it.
I'm just reading a book by David Bentley Hart, and I think he does it systematically also about atheists, quite often distorting their views, and not citing them directly, along the lines of 'atheists are 100% naturalists'. ('The Experience of God').
I quite agree , Wiggs. especially about David Bentley Hart.
Have you reached his chapter on 'Bliss' yet, where he has such little gems as:
“The least gesture of the will towards a moral end, no matter how vehemently one may suggest otherwise, is necessarily a confession of a natural longing for God.”
or:
"“Simply said, if there were no God, neither would there be such a thing as moral truth, nor such a thing as good or evil, nor such a thing as a moral imperative of any kind.”
Assertions rule OK. it seems.