No, your position is more akin to someone invited to a party, refusing the invitation...then gets angry that he's not enjoying the benefits of the party so then tries to tear the party venue down.
No, my position is that I'm stuck out in the cold and wet, I know people that don't have coats, who haven't eaten, who are diseased and pained, and the person that's stuck us out in the cold is dangling this invitation to a party like we should be glad to get it, and all we have to do is prostrate ourselves and be grateful for being made to suffer in order to be let in.
Oh, but if you try to get in early you're excluded.
Oh, and if the host doesn't like the friends he set you up with, you're excluded.
Oh, and if didn't hear about the invitation that's your own fault, and you're excluded.
Oh, and if your copy of the invitation is in the wrong language and you don't understand it, you're excluded.
Oh, and the invitation doesn't make sense, doesn't say where the party is, doesn't have a dress code, and there are seventy-nine versions of it all of which say something different but... you're fault.
Now shut up and be 'joyful' that you're so loved...
Complaining that God is responsible for a bad relationship doesn't seem to be an atheist argument.
It isn't, it's an argument against some of the core tenets of most forms of Christianity, but it's intriguing to see how far believers are willing to go to accept what is, on the face of it, a pretty twisted situation.
O.