Monotheism (the consensus)
The consensus....since when? Why would any non-monothesitic religions exist?
Polytheism was quite common. Countless worshippers and even today Hinduism still exists being among the oldest religions on earth. Pretty solid "evidence" (by this strange "consensus" metric) that Hinduism is the RIGHT religion.
would suggest that there is but *one* God, and *many human religions*. Humans don't seem to agree 100 percent on anything, so why would you expect 100 percent agreement on the topic of God?
Because this "consensus" of which you speak winds up with radically different gods. So much so that some of these gods are actively AGAINST the other gods (cf: Yahweh). Al'lah wants other worshipers of other gods to be actively hurt to make them stop.
There is no "consensus" other than people thinking
"there's something out there that no one can see, and cannot be adequately proven to have any specific traits such that the MAJORITY of people will experience it with significant commonality and it helps me explain the things I don't understand".
That is, exactly, useless as an indicator of something bigger. It is a VERY good indicator of imagination and human "need" for explanation.
There is a "consensus" among little kids that Santa is real. Does not mean that Santa has any reality.
You're still confusing the concept of religion (and human action) with God's will.
The only way one knows "God's Will" is from what other
humans say it is. (God's will in the OT is to shun --and even in some cases destroy-- those who worship other gods, Al'lah's will is to punish and destroy the infidel or turn them into muslims, etc.,etc.)
It's not that surprising to me since humans tend to believe whatever they feel like believing, with or without 'physical evidence' to support their conclusion.
Yes, humans have an active imagination. Hence the need for there to be an invisible something that helps explain all the things they don't understand.
Does not mean there actually
is something out there that would fit
any conception of a "god".