The nature of reality is that it is and that it is governed by laws. Reality doesn't care about what you choose to believe, it carries forward oblivious.
God, on the other hand, does care about what you believe. He wants you to believe in Him and to trust His word. If He says that Heⁿ created the world in seven days, He meant it. If He set forth laws to govern the universe, they aren't meant to be broken. If He set forth laws for man, they aren't meant to be broken.
Now, you can choose not to believe in God, but God believes in you regardless. He is and His will carries forward. At some point, reality will be remade, without sin. The knowledge of man will cease to exist and the knowledge of God will carry forward in eternity, as it was meant to be.
The only disagreement is rejection of God, but that's between you and Him, not you and I.
"IF He says" is operative there. As is IF a person
happens to have the inerrant ability to know exactly
what is meant by every word, and is likewise also
Intimately familiar with what this God wants. If, that is,
He exists.
A lot of IFS there, none of which are subject to actual
verification. Not singly or in combination.
You do not know those things, nobody does. Hence,
faith. Now, faith may well be a fine thing, we all have
some faith in this, or that. But it's well to think if one
might have a little too much faith, in himself.
A smug or self-satisfied certainty has led to many a disaster.
Terrible things.
Satisfaction that the Bible condoned slavery or war or torture
or or or.
You know all of that, I trust we've no disagreement.
I am offering no disagreement but rather thoughts
for possible consideration.
I was struck by your statement on seven (literal) days
of creation and God wanting us to trust his word.
See, the earth itself tells us with unmistakable
clarity that it did not form in seven days, and is
far far older than indicated by literal reading.
One who does not know how to read could imagine the
Bible saying anything, one who does not know what he
is seeing can misread the earth. But not if you have
understanding. A sailor won't misread the waves,
or the clouds, a geologist can say "drill here" where you
or I havent a clue. It's learning to read the earth.
And as you note, wind and water and everything else carries on,
it will rain or the volcano will blow regardless of what a person
understands or chooses to believe.
So I am struck by an irrevocable paradox in literal
reading- God wants trust in His word, yet says one
thing and does another.
How might one deal with this?