Hi Mathclub,
As Einstein put it, "The most incomprehensible thing about the universe is that it is comprehensible." And he wasn't saying that "comprehending" meant throwing away scientific inquiry simply because he did believe in some sort of intelligence behind it all that he called "God." Not looking for answers was not an option for him nor should it be for us.
The key is that we have to be willing to look, listen and learn. What adherents of one or another mythology won't do is modify their particular story in response to evidence. Nor are they willing to admit that their particular dogma of choice has been modified over the years for political or other arbitrary reasons. Many of Prof. Hawking's ideas have been prescient, yet scientists don't refer to him as "God's messenger" and simply download his pronouncements as some sort of absolute truth.
Physicists and astronomers are quite comfortable admitting that we are still learning about the universe, about the brain's ability to comprehend the universe, and about how what we observe may affect what is "real" in ways that we can't possibly (now) fully comprehend. Debates, disagreement and discovery are all part of the learning process. But the point is that scientists are ready to modify predominant theories in response to evidence such as experimentation, observation and mathematical proof. What they are not willing to do is throw away progress because someone claims to know it all, is speaking on the authority of an omnipotent being, or threatens to send all heretics to "hell" whether it's a place of eternal torment or some sort of non-consciousness or whatever.
Scientific and mathematical progress, while arguably creating new problems, has also formed the very basis for the technologies and societies that make this forum possible (and legal) in the first place. Had religionists had their way, progress would have been forbidden and our society would probably look like Afghanistan's.
Your breakfast was brought to you by science, technology, stable governance, a moderate climate and a supply chain that largely operates as a free market. It was not brought to you magically by a mystical all-powerful being. If it were, then the prayers of millions of starving people who also want to eat breakfast would be answered RIGHT NOW... unless you believe that the starving deserve their fate. I don't believe that anyone deserves to starve, except possibly some terrorist who believes that his "faith" gives him a right to kill me to serve his deity. That person can starve to death.
Religion makes a series of fantastic, wondrous claims that based on "evidence of things not seen." That is exactly why hundreds of people willingly drank Kool Aid to serve the God of Jim Jones in Guyana. They had total faith in God. They believed they were doing God's will. So did Martin Luther when he essentially declared Copernicus to be a heretic for having the temerity to claim that the earth revolved 'round the sun. Yet TODAY, no preacher or other "religious leader" would ever declare anything but. After all, we can all SEE that the earth revolves 'round the sun and not vice-versa. Praise Copernicus! The point is that religionists RESISTED THE TRUTH and many would have gladly executed the truth-teller and used the Bible ("God's truth") to justify it. We know about Copernicus, but how many other truth-seekers and freethinkers were burned to death as demons because they claimed that the evidence showed that the earth revolved 'round the sun?
I actually am a person of faith. But I admit that it's faith. If I am looking to convince the collective that this faith is justified or that others should join me in my particular faith then it's up to me to provide the evidence of that. Rational, verifiable evidence. Not an assertion, not a claim of the "authority of the Bible", not the age of my religion, number of adherents, the fact that it was the predominant religion in the Colonies, the advisability to "listen up or be sent to hell", or worse yet, readily debunked nonsense from the Creation Museum (come on, people).
Hundreds of millions of hardworking, kind, generous and everyday decent people from all over the world report feeling spiritually blessed and having their prayers answered. They follow myriad religions and denominations. They have all arrived at spiritual Truth with a capital T. And yet they are lined up against each other with bombastic rhetoric, claims of infallibility, suicide bombers and even advanced weaponry. You can argue that scientists are all "worshiping the gospel of science" but that gospel brought your breakfast and prevented your child from developing diptheria, tetanus, smallpox and whooping cough. If you reject science, then please have the moral consistency to stop eating, visiting doctors, navigating via GPS, taking airline flights and using the Internet.
Today's relgionists need to stop their faith as a pretext for assaulting rationality and progress. Such behaviour speaks volumes about the weakness of faith and not the strength of it. Consider this: Perhaps there's a clear message from a Creator that no one can deny, as clear as the fact that earth revolves, that we will only see when we make enough scientific progress to find it! The way forward is to stop claiming divine knowledge and be willing to seek observable, measurable and replicable truth. We cannot make progress by turning off our brains, rejecting scientific and mathematical thought and indulging in magical thinking or any claim of "godly" authority.