1. Miracles are often subjective or vague
2. All of the so claimed miracles have no trace of being different from the ordinary
Prove to me you are capable of conscious thought.
I don't mean that as an insult. I mean that as an intellectual exercise.
Much of life simply is not amenable at all to direct observation, and even more of it is unreasonably difficult to submit to rigorous scientific scrutiny. Consciousness, and by extension spirituality, to my way of thinking belong to that portion of life that simply is not amenable to direct observation. There is simply no way to scientifically study something you cannot directly observe. There will always be correlations, but some of the underlying facts, possible causes, etc, simply cannot be observed at all, rendering questions on the subject outside the sphere of science.
If conscious, willful action is possible, and I suggest that it is, then there is nothing particularly remarkable about the assertion that there is a God, especially given historical evidence. It is a short hop, skip and a jump from there to studying the various religions or spiritual traditions and finding the one that seems most likely to be true.
If the God of the Bible exists, the fact that you cannot pluck the past out of thin air and push it under a microscope effectively renders all arguments as to the distant past irrelevant to a Bible believing Christian. In much the same way you cannot guarantee a marble rolled across the floor of a crowded room will continue across the floor until it hits a wall, you simply cannot prove that the creator of the Universe did not do things that would render any hypothesis about what happened in the past useless by merely having done something that would not be detectable later by scientific means.
There is nothing illogical or even unscientific about even the most outrageous (to most modern minds) beliefs of a "fundamentalist". We merely start with an axiom that science cannot deal with at all.
People say that science does not presuppose anything, but it is ultimately useless to argue then that science should by now have uncovered evidence for something that would not be detectable by scientific means at all. Sure, science does not presuppose that there is no soul, spirituality, or God, but it also has no methodology for dealing with the interplay between these things and that which can indeed be studied and measured scientifically.
So, if you define a "scientists" as a person who presupposes that there is no God, you might well find some support for the idea God hates such individuals.
Ps 53:1
The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God .
KJV
Then, as now, David was well aware that God was Spirit. The fool takes advantage of this spiritual nature of God to argue, "What? I don't see anything! Why should I believe there is a God?"
Of course you don't. What'd you expect?
Show me you are capable of conscious thought. What? I don't see anything. You haven't
shown me your consciousness.
I guess I could argue then that I can do with you as I wish. You are not truly alive. You are an automaton. There is nothing about you to warrant treatment as an equal. You probably don't even truly feel in the human sense of the word "feel".
Weak logic, in my view. Don't you agree?