Sorry if I came off as insulting.
No problem! I didn't take it as an insult.
I understand, and as I've already stated, the so-called "problem of evil" is only a problem for certain notions of a god.
Is yours an argument against fundamentalist Christianity, or against an omnipotent, omniscient, benevolent God? There are other notions of an omnipotent, omniscient, benevolent[, insert descriptor here] God that are not fundamentalist Christian notions of God.
Problem is, there are lots of things, including causing suffering, which are not clearly right or wrong.
That is a fair point. But perhaps God doesn't judge us on those things as long as we're doing what we feel is right.
Right and wrong are decided by humans, not by God.
If God created humans, he is responsible for providing our ability to determine right and wrong. Even if he isn't responsible, that doesn't exactly further your argument unless you can prove that having the ability to choose between right and wrong (which would necessarily involve the ability to choose wrong) isn't for the greater good.
On many things, yes, yet there are still cultures which mutilate their children, allow husbands to murder their wives, and perhaps (and of this I am not sure) condone cannibalism. And these are not atheist cultures.
Good point, but I would guess that they believe that mutilating their children is for some greater good, which wouldn't make it needless suffering in their eyes. And they may actually be right, in which case the Problem of Evil wouldn't apply to their god! Or maybe they're all wrong and another god (who doesn't allow such things) is right. The Problem of Evil cannot disprove either possibility.
-Bri