The problem is that you're trying to have it both ways. You expect me to prove to you various physical phenomenon and how they happen without divine interference, but actively refuse to give me any reason to believe that divine interference is necessary or argue for any sort of proof of God. You sit back on a position that God exists and that is the default position and people must prove otherwise. That is not how the burden of proof works. You say I must not deny it without reason -- you are incorrect. You must not believe it without reason and give others a reason to believe in it if you expect them to. I do not deny it 'without reason'. I deny it precisely because there is no reason to believe it.
I've played your game for long enough: Burden of proof is on you to give some real evidence rather than pointing to various (perceived) idiosyncrasies within the universe as evidence that God is there holding it all together. People should know better than to play the God of the Gaps Game by now. It becomes increasingly embarrassing for them every time a new gap is closed up by information uncovered by science. I wonder what's going to happen when there are little to no gaps left to hide in.






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