I still do not believe I am confused here.
You said of argument B "Premise 1 logically states that there can be no evil if the omni-God exists" yet that actually is not what premise 1 states rather "If the omni-God exists, then there will be no evil." Notice how you're switching the conditionals.
It doesn't make any difference. I'm just rewording the same logical structure. Premise 1, as stated in the opening post:
"If an omnipotent, omniscient, and omnibenevolent god exists, then evil does not."
It doesn't matter if we say "does not" or "can not".
Stated in the former way, we have to affirm the antecedent, however, structured in the original way, we have to affirm the consequent.
I have no idea what you are talking about. We don't have to affirm either of them. Premise 1 just says that if the omni-God exists, then evil does not or can not, and it doesn't matter which, because the end result is the same.
You seem to be saying the exception to this formal fallacy is that the consequent is negated. I am not saying that couldn't be the case, just asking for sources as I am not aware of any that state such. If anything I doubt that is the exception and would prefer it verified by credential sources if it is.
Just think about it!!!
Here is the fallacy:
1. If the devil exists, then there will be evil.
2. There is evil.
3. Therefore the devil exists.
It's a fallacy because there might be some other reason there is evil - because premise 1 does not rule out other causes of evil.
Here is our argument
1. If the omni-God exists, then there [will be / can be / is] no evil.
2. There is evil.
3. Therefore for the omni God does not exist.
In this case, premise 1 really does rule something out - it rules out the possibility of the omni-God and evil both existing at the same time.
Premise 1 is
logically identical to:
1: The omni-God and evil cannot co-exist.
I don't have a source for you, but my grasp on logic is pretty secure. Why should there be a source to explictly state that something which isn't affirming the consequent isn't invalid? Our argument is simply not an example of "affirming the consequent." We aren't affirming
the consequent - the consequent is "there is no evil" and we are affirming the opposite!