I am curious about this Michael:
We all know you have a theory as to how God interacts with us in regards to the universe etc and that theory is quite important to you, because it likely makes sense and matches with your beliefs. I am not saying your theory is right or it is wrong, because there is not enough evidence either way to confirm or to absolutely deny it. But, what if it is discovered with strong evidence, that your theory is indeed incorrect, would that crush your faith, or would you be able to retain your faith by other means?
I went though about a 9 year stint as an atheist from about age 15 to about 24. One of the 'positive' experience (there were many actually) of embracing atheism for a time was learning to live with ambiguity.
My return to theism wasn't instantaneous anymore than embracing atheism had been an 'instant' decision. That was about thirty years ago, and I have been quite comfortable with my faith in God being a pure form of 'faith', completely devoid of *any* empirical evidence. My own personal experiences during prayer and meditation matter more to me personally than the physical evidence.
I didn't really even "hear" about electric universe/plasma cosmology theory until about 2005 after having a revelation about electrical discharges related to solar physics. Once I started exploring the theory however, I couldn't help but eventually revisit and take a fresh look at the concept of Pantheism/Panentheism. The more I did, the more evidence I found.
I do recognize that Panentheism may be wrong. We may live in an electrically active universe that isn't "alive". That wouldn't surprise me, nor would it "freak me out' at all.
EU/PC theory was never a "fundamental/foundational principle" in my "faith" in God to begin with. It just so happens that a living universe would 'scientifically' explain all my personal experiences during prayer and meditation from the perspective of empirical physics. That alone 'intrigues' me, but it's not a foundational aspect of my faith. My faith in Christ isn't really related to any specific scientific beliefs. I embraced Jesus as my Savior, long before embracing or even hearing about EU/PC theory.
Christ is important to me personally. Cosmology theories are just 'interesting' to me personally, and I've always been interested in the topic. Somehow over the years, I can see how they can all come together quite nicely under the umbrella of empirical physics. IMO, why not give it a scientific whirl?