Beastie, I don't see why a God who exists must be completely unknowable to us. This seems to operate on several assumptions that are just as untestable as the existence of God. So why do you believe it?
This sounds more like medieval Christian theology.
I don’t know how much more to clarify it other than with the examples I already gave (Q and Flatlanders), but I’ll try.
Let’s say that someone wants to evaluate how accurately a text was translated from French to English. Certain prerequisite knowledge is required to logically make that evaluation – a strong knowledge of both English and French. One cannot logically evaluate something that is based on information one does not possess.
In the book Flatland, the creatures are two dimensional and live on a two dimensional world. Everything they perceive is processed through the limitations of living in a two dimensional world. Other worlds exist, as well, including the one-dimensional world, Lineland, and a three dimensional world, Spaceland. A Flatlander visits Lineland and tries to help the monarch there to understand that a two dimensional world exists, but the monarch is incapable of doing so, because of the monarch’s limitations due to being a one dimensional being living in a one dimensional land. Then a visitor from Spaceland, a sphere, visits this character in Flatland, and tries to convince HIM of the existence of the three dimensional world. The Flatlander cannot comprehend Spaceland until he actually sees Spaceland, due to his own limitations of living in a two dimensional world. Up until the time he actually witnesses Spaceland, what the sphere tries to tell him is as incomprehensible as what he, the Flatlander, tried to tell the monarch of Lineland. If I recall correctly, the sphere bounces in and out of view, but it doesn’t look like a ball in the two dimensional world, but rather just a two dimensional shape that oddly appears an disappears and changes shape (depending on the angle it was seen by the two dimensional being). So until the Flatlander
actually witnessed Spaceland, his “understanding” of the sphere was so restrained by his natural limitations that he really did not “know” what the sphere was at all.
We are the Flatlanders. We live in a world constrained by the dimensions we inhabit. God would be a Spacelander. If a God exists and visits us, our perception of that godbeing is as limited as the Flatlander’s perception of the sphere. It is so limited that we do not “know” God at all. We may tell ourselves stories about that being, just like the Flatlander tried to comprehend the sphere bouncing in and out of his view range in his two dimensional world, but those stories are all naturally so constrained by our own limitations they are hopelessly distorted.
So evidence may point to the existence of X, and that may be very strong evidence of the existence of X. But being naturally constrained by the limitations of being mortal, finite, beings living in a world of limited dimensions, the “story” we tell about X is hopelessly flawed and distorted. Even if the being claimed to be “God”, we do not possess the prerequisite background knowledge to logically evaluate that claim, because we are beings from, so to speak, a two dimensional world. Unless and until we WITNESS Spaceland – at death, I suppose – we are blind.
Now, if there were solid evidence of, say, miraculous healings when people pray to God, and these healings could not be explained by science or nature, then that would constitute strong evidence of X, which people call God. But we still know nothing about that X. As I said, for all we know, from our limited perspective, it could be a being from an alien race so far advanced from us it looks magical, like Q in Startrek.
I fail to see how this constitutes evidence. You first need to explain how a world without a God exists at all. What is your explanation for the existence of the universe?
To which theory do you subscribe?
No, I don’t “need” to explain how a world without a God exists at all, any more than the people who lived prior to Darwin “needed” to explain how complex creatures came to be. I do not adhere to a God of the gaps, and it sounds like you do.