The evolution of my perspective on God, religion in general actually, has been a long one. I was brought up a Baptist, graduated from a Christian college, entered the ministry, and attended the American Baptist Seminary of the West in Berkeley. Also, I never gave up on rational thought.
The influence of certain philosophers and theologians (Tillich, Whitehead, and Teilhard to name a few) aided the evolution. It became clear that the religious community conflates the terms belief and faith. Faith to many is after the order of Lewis Carroll's Queen of Hearts. She would believe in six impossible things before breakfast. The point of religion is to provide meaning rather than definition. Belief in stupid shit does nothing to facilitate that. Tillich suggests that faith is the 'act of being grasped by ultimate concern' allowing for both meaning and growth. The problem with the Queen of Hearts and other fundamentalists is that to maintain belief in stupid shit, they must deny elements of truth of which they may be only dimly aware. Maybe faith has nothing to do with believing in stupid shit. I do not believe in a god because I see no reason to do so, and that strengthens my faith.
I lack faith in anything,I prefer trust which comes about from observation over a time period ie I trust someone after I have come to know a person/s such as my adult children and close friends.Faith is absolute which is too much to ask
Belief is quite transitory. Faith not so much, although I would not use the term absolute.
Hebrews 11: 1 says: Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see.
Well I hope I win the lottery and believing in something without evidence is pretty ignorant. I used to read this very verse and think it had positive meaning. No critical thinking skills. I experienced an evolution of thinking also.
Interesting. It sort of coincides with something that I have been pondering for a while; does belief really serve a purpose to an individual? Or, as some postulate, just a cover for ignorance and fear of the unknown?
Is it like a security blanket? How does one get it, once they've lost it?
As stated above, I think belief in stupid shit should be avoided. It tends to get in the way of faith.