Title says all.
Christians, Muslims, and jews claim that pagan gods are "muh ebil satan".
But the abrahamic god that they worship literally tells the jews, his "chosen", that they are allowed to have slaves.
Christians and muslims both owned slaves too, infact, muslims still have slaves to this day.
The abrahamic god told his follwers to draw the blood of children, and permanently mutilate said children, in horrific circumcision rituals.
Who are the top three groups that do circumcision? jews, muslims, and Christians.
So, how do abrahamic religions have the audacity to claim that pagan gods are all "muh ebil debble"?
How do abrahamic religions have the audacity to call their god "pure good"?
Honestly?
If that is what God and his followers are like...
I would really hate to see what satan and his followers are like.
You have a very incorrect understanding of what was going on in OT and NT times.
Modern "Christians" have little clue as well. So I can't blame you.
Other gods are not necessarily evil.
The modern Christian perception of "Satan" or "The Devil" is completely foreign to the text of the Bible and the people living in Biblical times.
Read the Bible for yourself. Let it do the speaking for itself. Do not trust others to interpret it for you.
1. In the Genesis account, in Chapter 3 I think v22, God declares that "Now man has become as one of us, knowing good from evil." This is an important clue as to what "god" is and what it means. In this context, it seems to be a being that has understanding of good and evil. In that sense, we are all gods (except those who can't understand good and evil.) I believe that for most of human history, humans were worshiping their ancestors or great people, which is what they called gods in the OT and NT.
2. In the OT account, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob never once calls out the other groups of people who are worshiping "false gods" for worshiping false gods. In fact, it looks very much like they are all worshiping the same god or gods. This is important. You see God interacting with other people. Abraham is simply God's favorite. We read in the NT why God liked Abarham so much -- he saw NT days and he trusted in God above all else. So God chose to make his descendants special.
3. After the exodus, God condemns Israel for worshiping Egyptian gods, going so far as to kill them for it. This is really the first time we see that the Israelite religion is separated from the other religions. However, and this is key, according to historical and archaeological accounts, the nature of the God of the Bible isn't very different from the other gods in the area. There is also the notion that the God of Israel YHWH has dominion over the land of Israel, but not outside of it. When Israelites leave the land of Israel they seem to be forced to worship those other gods. IE, David, when he was exiled, was upset because he didn't want to worship other gods.
4. Sometime around King Josiah ca. 600 BC, things changed a lot in Israel. There was a massive reformation of the religion of Israel and it became even more distinct from the surrounding religions. Also around this time, wars are not just wars between tribes and people, but between the gods themselves.
5. Romans did not perceive foreign gods as foreign, but merely foreign interpretations of universal gods. They would bring foreign gods into their temples and try to have people worship the same gods. This is really the first time that gods would extend their domain beyond their own lands.
6. Jesus spread like wildfire after his resurrection because he was literally a god just like many of the gods in the pantheon. However, Jesus was different because he had a different code of ethics and his followers were teaching he wasn't just "a" God but "THE" God, or rather, the Son of "THE" God. At no time did early Christians denounce people for worshiping other gods. They just told people about Jesus and they convinced people to put him first.
7. The rapid spread of Christianity in the first few hundred years was due, in part, I think, because it was NOT EXCLUSIVE. You could hold on to Thor or Zeus or whoever and worship Jesus. In fact, early missionaries were bringing the other gods into the pantheon of Christianity, calling them angels or whatever. The demons were simply "bad" gods that shouldn't be worshiped but defeated by the "good" gods.
8. Around the 5th Century AD Christianity started to become more Greek, more philosophical, and more regular. People were beating each other up for disagreeing about what we would perceive are minor theological points. If you didn't carry the agreed line, you were often persecuted or put to death, which is the exact opposite of what Jesus told his disciples to do to people who disagreed with them.
9. The Reformation further screwed things up, bringing in an inconsistent and illogical reading of the Bible and history.