TragicMonkey
Poisoned Waffles
Inherent in the criticism of "moral relativism" is the contrasting notion of moral absolutes. Indeed, Christian fundamentalists and others often use the term "absolute" to refer to the Word of God. Thus, God's laws are absolutes. His proscriptions against certain behaviors are not to be examined in context. They mean what they say. Murder is always wrong. Adultery is always wrong.
And the only reason murder and adultery are wrong, in such a view, is because of God's personal dislike of them. If God changed his mind and announced to the faithful tomorrow "Hey! Murder all your children!" that would be the new absolute moral value and the right thing to do. Actions have no moral value in themselves, it's just how God feels about them that assigns them moral value.