Are you kidding me?
Let's go over this again:
- Both --- meaning God ordained it because it is good, and it is good because God ordained it.
- I did already --- by showing [true] morality as coming from a vertical direction --- up.
I think you missed something here:
1. What you have done here is come down on
one side of the dilemma.
You have stated, in effect, that God ordains that which is Good. which means morality really
isn't absolute; it is
whatever God decrees it to be.
That's fine. It is a way to deal with the dilemma by coming down firmly on one side.
However, you trip up in that you seem to also want God to do whatever is moral. Which means God adheres to some pre-set rules of morality. God then is
subservient to some externally defined "morality". (I'll leave it to your imagination as to who established that), or for that matter why your God is now little more than a "conduit" of this superior morality.
Again, this is fine if you come down on this side, but you can't really come down on
both sides. That's why it's a "dilemma".
It sounds to me like you haven't really "solved" the dilemma, but rather you have decreed that you think whatever God says is Right. That's fine, but it does make morality "arbitrary".
2. You have shown no such definition that morality
by necessity includes reference to God. Just
saying it is a "vertical" relationship has as much meaning as if I were to say "morality tastes like caramel."