Another stunt often attempted, futilely, is the almost but not entirely equivocation fallacy. I'm not sure whether it's an attempt to make stuff up on the run, misrepresent actual knowledge, demonstrate the magnitude of ignorance required, so many possibilities but anyway an example does involve The Garden Of Eden.
God could have just incinerated Adam & Eve on the spot (I was not directly involved in this conversation) apparently, once sin entered Eden. He did not do so. We know that demonstrates His love and mercy, even in the face of sin which is completely revolting, and that the paradise He planted was imbued with perfection. There are two reasons [
1] because God is perfect and [
2] because there was no sin. And that's where the equivocation started.
“God did not say that Eden was perfect,” I heard, “He said it was ‘good,’” which is about as nit-picking as you can get (I thought) because any environment not containing sin cannot be improved upon. What better condition is there? Good in this usage means pleasing to God and the least jot of sin ruins everything like a bottle ink tipped over the linen voile kaftan you'd spent all week making ready for spring.
Ink 
Furthermore, we know that Christians cannot sin because God says so! Maybe there are faux-churches out there cooking up doctrines without reference to Jesus and maybe they have a doctrine that Christians are not perfect but forgiven. Perhaps even most of them do have that doctrine – but it conflicts with the teachings of Jesus. How is that equivocation? It demands that the concept of sinlessness be treated one way in one context [before sin entered Eden] but in quite another way [from believers no longer in Eden] when Jesus commands perfection. From an objective standpoint, in both cases the motivating factor is the same: to please God. That is the true context and I have trouble deciding, is it ignorance of the source material? Did the speaker misrepresent actual knowledge for some nefarious reason? Or are dissipated wretches making up nonsense on the fly for a more piquant embrace of Eve's transgression.
So sad.