You should get your dad to ask for his money back. Sorry busterdog, the amount of money your dad spent on educating you does not count as scientific evidence.
As far as I know there has never been any scientific research into whether or not an omnipotent incarnate deity is capable of raising people from the dead. All science has ever studied is ordinary human beings using normal human processes.
We can conclude, scientifically, that either the accounts of resurrection are wrong, or Jesus was not an ordinary human being using normal human abilities. But surprise surprise, they knew all that in the first century.
I think you guys are being a bit cagey. If you limit you definition of scientific inquiry to what actually appears in grant proposals, you can avoid the problem.
At college they talked about having a "modern" or "informed" worldview. That is a worldview informed by science. In most hospitals, the trained scientists put a sheet on your face when your heart stops. They tend not to wait for the cadaver to get up and they might try to medicate you involuntarily if you have that expectation. I don't think there is much need to debate whether I am correct in describing this as science. The great majority of academics in the West certainly think it is a worldview informed by modern science.
However, if you do want to redefine science you way, I am game -- only if we can say that science has not examined a literal six day creation. If you are going to remove some fields from the realm of scientific inquiry (as in, whether God exists and what He does), you kind of have a rather limited basis to opine on many matters, and we all know there is lots of opining about such things. Why then would you exclude ID from schools? Just because science can't talk about God or because ID is wrong?
Are we talking past one another?
Medical diagnosis of incurable illness is a science. A divine miraculous recovery is known in the trade as "magical thinking" and is considered error. Now some doctors do not think this way, for sure. Some studies have happened. But, you do have a clash of beliefs in this area, one of which is a scientifically based exclusion of the idea of divinely mediated miracles. In an area that murky, why must you insist that the exclusion of God and miracles is not a scientific principle? How about if we define it as a majority or minority position in science? And, if a patient faced with incurable illness tends to think ill of their chances, what is that believe most consistent with -- science, religion or what? Could be either or a mixture. But, for many a scientific worldview fits the bill and gives them pessimism. Is that too fuzzy or vague, what? I don't get your problem?