Since you have taken up your challenge of a few posts ago let me take this on and maybe answer some of Sebastian Toes points as we go.
First of all, evidence of God aversion. Both Lawrence Krauss and Thomas Nagel talk of not wanting (aversion) God and both would along with many atheists acknowledge that they don't have full certainty that God does not exist. You yourself have counselled your fellow atheists not to declare that. In other words Logic does not decree atheism.
Given then that God may exist we are presented with various approaches to and understandings of God.
Which understanding garners most aversion? Is it the remote God? Is it the improbable God of the atheists? Is it the Ant God? Is it the God that Mohammed talks about?or what buddha talks about?
No, the evidence from this board is that the God who garners most heartfelt aversion is the Christian God, a God presented as close, once incarnate as a human being, who seems to offer personal relationship in which mere intellectual assent will not seem to suffice.
Plenty evidence of God aversion then
Given this the claim that Goddodging is a deeply idiotic idea looks unfounded.
I haven't any aversion to God that I know about. I wouldn't know if it exists or not. Most certainly I find no evidence at all of its existence. So, why should I have a reason to believe in it.
Accepting however that God may exist( I have no evidence to suggest conclusively that it doesn't) I am confronted mostly by Christians who have their own particular version of their God, one which I see no evidence for, and also one which seems to have some rather unpleasant characteristics. The more evangelistic Christians tend to try to persuade me of their particular take upon their God to which I, at times, quite reasonably react, pointing to the complete lack of evidence for what they are saying, the illogicality of some of their statements and stressing that they are simply asserting things because of their faith.
If I lived in a country which had a different god version(e.g. Judaism, Hinduism, Islam) no doubt I would be challenging anyone who was trying to convince me of the validity of their particular god in the same way(unless, of course, I would become the subject of state/religious oppression). Indeed, I used to mix with many Jewish friends when I was young, and had many arguments with them on this subject.
So, I don't see your point at all. Certainly I don't see the idea that I am goddodging has anything to recommend it in my case, and certainly not because most of those that I argue against(when I can be bothered) are Christian.