Absolutely true,
@MeganC knows what she's talking about here!
I do. I am unflinchingly convicted of the existence of God and of His presence in my life.
I also cannot escape my conviction that God created the universe and that He caused us to exist.
My conviction is then not conditioned on any particular view of creation past a rational understanding of it as our limited minds might perceive it. That rational understanding is then subject to change as new evidence is revealed or as old evidence is discounted.
Either way my conviction of the existence of God and of His presence in my life is not shaken.
I allow for God to reveal His mysteries in His time and not mine.
I am also humble enough not to insist that God must fit into a box of
my creation in order to be worthy of my respect.
As I have said before too many Christians insist on putting God into this box ☐ (actual size).
This is my God:
When I behold Your heavens,
the work of Your fingers,
the moon and the stars,
which You have set in place—
what is man that You are mindful of him,
or the son of man that You care for him?
I am convinced that God created an infinitely immense universe in which billions upon billions of light years of travel would barely be a start.
I believe that He created us to inherit that universe and one day humanity will spread out into it.
Is it not written:
You made him (man) ruler of the works of Your hands
We are then intended to reach for the stars that He created for us to rule over.
I am convicted that God ordained each of us to exist at the very outset of creation. Each of us is inevitable.
He created a paradox of Free Will for our forebears whose freely chosen actions served a Holy Plan and caused each of us to be born.
I am convinced that He is present in my life and the lives of every single person whether they believe in Him or not.
I am convicted of our salvation through Jesus Christ who was and is the living Son of God.
I arrived at my conviction rationally. For me the existence of God is an inescapable fact.
My rationality also says that where there is no evidence of a lake then there was no lake. I am happy to consider evidence such as the potential existence of a lake somewhere that has no shoreline and whose waters have left no trace. But no such evidence exists, does it?
My rationality also informs me that an equal part of water is not going to cut an equal part of solid rock. Nope. No way.
The hydroplate theory of the sudden and catastrophic creation of the Grand Canyon is, upon examination, irrational.
Conversely I rationally believe the Ten Commandments were the literal Word of God written by Him. Lots of Jewish stonecutters would have seen the tablets and called BS on them were they created in a way that a human could have created them. Their supernatural provenance at the time had to have been obvious.
Ditto I believe that Moses parted the Red Sea because a bunch of people were witness to it.
There is enough testimonial evidence for the existence and acts of Jesus to make a court case.
I follow where the evidence leads me.