Actually I was referring to generalized theism (a bit surprising, given that I am
more averse to non-Christian theism than I am to atheism). But sure, why not?
As opposed to modern times, in which astrologers claim that planets can impart their essence to infants via neutrino interactions, despite the fact that the neutrino mean free path is orders of magnitude larger than the radius of even the largest solar planets? Believe it or not, one of my fellow
astrophysics grad students at work subscribes to astrology, along with a host of other superstitions such as ouija boards, crystals, etc. And he isn't alone. A few years ago in India there was a push for astrology to be offered as a B.S. program at major universities. Many of the proponents held scientific PhDs from legitimate institutions!
My point is this: superstition exists in modern times just as it did in ancient times. And apparently, a scientific education doesn't effectively shield one from believing such things. Likewise, skepticism of superstition existed in ancient times. If my memory is accurate, the character of Hecuba in
The Trojan Women denied Helen of Troy's claims regarding the myth of the three goddesses who visited Prince Paris and incited the Trojan War. This is significant because the play was written quite awhile after the
Iliad, and reflects skepticism of earlier Greek superstition. It seems to me that your views concerning superstition are a product of the philosophers of the Enlightenment, and not of scientists, who don't have much of a unified position on this issue.
And might I add that since I differentiate Christian doctrine from blind superstition, you may be arguing a strawman here.
Perhaps you can demonstrate why you say that this is true. The Bible clearly differentiates stars from clouds (compare Genesis 1:1 and 1:16). As to the usage of the word "heaven," this is not merely a phenomenon in ancient language, it occurs in modern English too. The phrase "the heavens" is used to refer to the celestial realm. And there is a clear distinction in both modern English and Biblical Greek between the heavens and the dwelling place of God. The ancient Hebrew cosmology referred to three heavens: a first which refers to the sky, a second which refers to what can be seen in the celestial sphere, and a third which refers to the dwelling place of God. An example is found in the Bible:
I know a man in Christ who fourteen years ago was caught up to the third heaven--whether in the body or out of the body I do not know, God knows. (2 Corinthians 12:2)
In any case, to say that clouds and stars are not differentiated from one another is simply incorrect.
As to your claim regarding ascribing anthropomorphic qualities to natural phenomena, I'll have to ask you to elaborate, since I'm not sure what you mean by this.
Actually the Bible itself says that God is invisible to many of the senses:
To the King of ages, immortal, invisible, the only God, be honor and glory forever and ever. Amen. (1 Timothy 1:17)
He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation. (Colossians 1:15)
As to the claim that God cannot be heard, I'm not aware of any such Biblical teaching, so you'll have to cite the one you're thinking of. On the contrary, I know of many believers in Jesus Christ who claim to have heard the audible voice of God.
Disproportionate? I think not. Believers in Christ place our trust in the voice of God himself. Those who effectively worship science are placing their trust in a discipline which doesn't even make any claims of absolute truth.
But since you claim to trust scientists, surely you can trust me (I learned physics from a source slightly more reliable than Wikipedia). Trust me, then, when I say that science doesn't do the things you think it can do. It doesn't let you peer into the supernatural, it doesn't disprove the existence of the supernatural, and it doesn't give meaning to your life. Futuwwa's example regarding the ruler is quite apt.