In this you are reducing your conscious self to be just a spectator of neurological responses to stimuli over which you have no conscious control.
Quite possibly, yes - it may be that it's a slightly more dynamic feedback loop than that, but it's still a post-hoc awareness of activity that's going to happen regardless of our awareness of it.
Every thought you make is just an unavoidable response to past stimuli.
That's about it, yes.
The concept of conscious control of your thoughts is impossible.
Not impossible, it's just not something different - our conscious thoughts are just like our subconscious thoughts only we're more explicitly aware of them.
You would not even have the ability to consciously verify the thought processes going on in your mind.
You would, it just wouldn't necessarily change anything.
This is not the reality I exist in.
Whether it is or isn't isn't dependent upon how you feel about it.
Could I make such a statement without the ability to consciously control my own thoughts?
Of course. That it's an inevitable result of your history, and that it's outside of any illusion of control you have doesn't mean that it's correct - you're as capable of being subconsciously wrong as you are of being consciously wrong.
I am citing the reality of or own consciously driven abilities which override the flawed logic based on our very limited human knowledge.
No you weren't, you were saying that "...a logical impossibility - which is why it complies with the spiritual nature of the human soul as depicted in the divine revelations of the Bible." Your claim was that the illogic of it somehow demonstrated its validity in a 'heads I win, tails you lose' attempt to claim both sides. If it's illogical for us, it's illogical for god and reality too. You can claim that our precepts are mistaken, fine, you can assert that you're going to maintain your faith despite the apparent illogic of it. But, to claim that if it's logically untenable that somehow proves your case as well is just to be not engaging in the debate in good faith.
O.