I agree there must be an understanding of definition of terms and that principle is the basis on which I asked for a definition of the term method. The atheists as I do myself are in my view having difficulty outside the scientific method as evidenced by their sentiment that somehow it’s not up to them to define their meaning of it but for me to just run off and find one, “there’s a good chap.”
I think having a discussion is fine but we are all aware that a discussion does not necessarily involve taking anyone's claims seriously.
I think the issue of a method is in relation to the specific atheist challenge that if theists want their claim of God
as fact to be taken seriously by anyone who currently does not hold a belief in gods or that specific god, the theist needs to provide a method to justify their claim. As there is no method currently, it justifies the atheist position - which is that they do not share the theist's belief about gods.
It just makes the point that theism is based on a belief - for which there is no objective evidence. So while there might be some historical evidence that atheists find convincing that a person called Muhammad probably existed in 7th century Arabia, there is no evidence that he received a message from gods or any evidence that gods exists. He is said, according to the traditional stories, to have been illiterate, but there is no way of verifying this. And not having an explanation for the origins of the universe does not make gods any more plausible.
So gods remain a belief - a personal experience - a feeling unique to each individual whose mind interprets their feelings as a belief in a particular god. I think your suggestion that atheists are god-dodging sounds as patronising as PD's suggestion that some people claim to be atheists but they weren't really. I think I know what you are getting at, but having examined my feelings of belief, I don't think I am dodging the concept of the Trinity etc any more than you are dodging Allah.