Okay, I have some time at work now, to reply to your post, James:
wegs:
It sounds like you believe in God for other reasons than the mysteries of the universe, and you're just giving God something else to do by saying he created gravity and all those other things.
Well, faith at least for me, doesn't come down to one ''ah-ha'' moment; it's been a journey of sorts.
What I would ask is along the lines of: how do you know that God created gravity? I mean, you have somehow arrived at this belief that God created gravity, but based on what? Speaking for myself, I would need to see some positive evidence that points towards a god creating gravity before I accepted that God created gravity, and the same applies to any other aspect of God's supposed Creation.
This is probably where believers and non-believers start talking past each other, but here goes. lol Faith is a belief system, and it's not based on objective evidence. Faith is largely arrived at from subjective experience, and beliefs through studying different religions, and belief systems, and also as to what can be discovered through prayer or meditation. Do you feel science is the only way to find answers about yourself, and the universe? I don't feel it is.
Merely perceiving a gap in our knowledge does not justify inserting a god to fill it, in my opinion. Suppose we don't know where gravity came from. Okay, fine. So, maybe gravity came about due to some as-yet-undiscovered natural process, or maybe it came about because of a god. Until there's evidence one way or the other, why should we say the god did it, rather than the alternative? Shouldn't we just be content to say that, for now, we don't know where it came from, and we need to wait until more data comes in?
You're content with that, but, I guess I'm not. I was when I identified as an atheist, but per my post above, I don't think that the answers about life and the world around me, can only be answered through science. In my opinion, there is too much emphasis on expecting science to do all the heavy lifting, and if it doesn't provide an answer, we should just stop seeking. Or we keep seeking until we find an answer that suits, which is fine, of course. I'm not saying we insert a god...most believers don't come to faith that way, from what I can tell. It's not like I was an atheist, and then started thinking about scientific theories and said ''yep, I'm going back to belief, because that makes the most sense.'' I came back to faith for personal reasons, yet my faith honestly doesn't contradict my respect and understanding of science. Believing in a god, doesn't cause science to suddenly become meaningless. (unless you're a devout fundamentalist)
I understand that if you start from the notion that there's a God, without evidence, then it's easy to extend that belief into all kinds of gaps to "explain" mysteries, but I think that's just giving in to a false sense of confidence about your belief in God. God just becomes a magical place-filler to plug all the uncomfortable gaps in your knowledge.
The mysteries of the universe aren't uncomfortable gaps. My faith isn't about plugging a god in to help me ''handle'' scientific mysteries of the universe. But, I understand that from where you sit, it could seem that way. Not all believers are alike, there's also that. In my opinion, science is a means to discovering what has always been there.
I am interested in how you went from being an atheist a few years back to now believing in a god. What changed your mind?
I had a personal experience that led me back to believing, and when I was an atheist, I felt ...Idk, a sense of emptiness. Like in an existential kind of way. I've always been interested in spirituality and world religions even just from a research standpoint, so maybe some of us just aren't comfortable being atheists. One of my friends tells me that I went back to faith on pure emotion, but logically, I'm still an atheist. It would seem that everyone tries to ''diagnose'' the believer in the room. lol All I can say is, I'm happy now.
Specifically, what evidence convinced you that God exists, after all? Or is it more of a gut feeling, or something?
Some of it is a gut feeling, some of it is in reading different ancient texts and believing that if others thought there was something more (and these beliefs have carried through thousands of years) then maybe it's worth exploring.
I didn't mean for my comments above to derail the thread

But, thanks for asking and letting me share.
(Having said
all of that, my spiritual beliefs don't cause me to have irreconcilable differences with science.)