Is this up for discussion?
Faith isn't the opposite of reason; that would be irrationality, and faith isn't commensurate with reason, but rather the sort of trust that puts into place conclusions of reason, and is even present in reasoning itself through the trust or confidence that reason is a valid means of attaining truth.
As for reason that excludes suppositions, I can only go back to my logic class as an undergraduate: premises are by definition assumptions, and conclusions can be either valid or invalid in that the they follow the premises or not, or they can be sound or unsound in that the premises are known to be true. You're conflating reason with soundness. They're different things.
We can discuss/debate the various definitions of faith and/or reason, but my intention in this OP was not to. Hence my attempts to clarify what I define them as (not objectively what they are).
The point of the OP was to discuss whether it is consistent to argue that you are applying 'reason' to your particular brand of theism, whilst excluding every other alternative from consideration.
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