So do you ignore the universe? Or have you checked and tested it? Where does it end?
I check as much of it as I am able to. Scientists can check a lot more of it than I can, and I go by what they find.
Have you checked out spirits and angels?
No I haven't, as I have never encountered them. Please, provide one for me and I shall check it ASAP.
Or maybe we should ignore the billions of folks over history that believe in them?
I'm perfectly willing to believe in what other people say about angels and spirits. However, since I have not found anyone who has examined them in a way that is rigorous and thorough and lends itself to testing and checking, and also since there are many different claims made about spirits and angels, I have concluded that now objective information about spirits or angels exists. Not that I have encountered, anyway.
But if such information exists, please provide it. (People telling stories about them is not objective information, that is hearsay.)
Should we ignore that Jesus lived? Or should we wait till you check it out objectively?
I have, and I have not found any convincing evidence that he ever lived. All I've seen is accounts written after the events they allege to describe, and also accounts that were written by people who weren't there. No primary sources.
How about when the universe unfolds differently than the theories of science thought? Should we add all the past instances of science being wrong and not being objective?
Yes, science has been wrong. But the nature of science is that it corrects itself. New evidence is not vehemently denied by scientists because they already believe in something different. They test the new evidence, and if the evidence withstands that testing, then they change their views accordingly. I can name several examples of this. The evidence for the Big Bang, plate tectonics (which altered a few times as new evidence was discovered).
In any case, you have a much higher proportion of being wrong about reality than science does.
I see in the news, that the chemical composition of a star is at odds with what they thought.
"
The ALMA observations revealed that this newly discovered core in the LMC has a
very different composition to similar objects found in the Milky Way. The most prominent chemical signatures in the LMC core include familiar molecules such as sulfur dioxide, nitric oxide, and formaldehyde -- alongside the ubiquitous dust. But several organic compounds, including methanol (the simplest alcohol molecule), had
remarkably low abundance in the newly detected hot molecular core. In contrast, cores in the Milky Way have been observed to contain a wide assortment of complex organic molecules, including methanol and ethanol.
Takashi Shimonishi explains: "The observations suggest that the molecular compositions of materials that form stars and planets are
much more diverse than we expected."
The LMC has a low abundance of elements other than hydrogen or helium [3]. The research team suggests that this very different galactic environment has affected the molecule-forming processes taking place surrounding the newborn star ST11. This could account for the observed differences in chemical compositions."
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/09/160929082019.htm
Different to what they expected. The models that lead them to expect one thing are still quite accurate, as evidenced by the fact that they describe the vast majority of stars quite well.
Your argument seems to be like declaring a map should be thrown out as useless because it got the position of one laneway wrong by two meters.
Of course I have to be wiling to change my mind on all clams of science. The claims fall by the wayside in predictable patterns and face inevitable extinction. The word of God changes not though. It stands through the ages. Unscathed. Undefeated. Undeniable.
*Sigh*
Except you don't care about science, it seems. You care about matching up what science presents with your ideas about your religion. If they don't contradict, then you are happy with the science. But if they do contradict, then you automatically assume that the science is wrong, and not your interpretation of your religion.