One of the repeated phrases on this thread is "Why would God hide Himself from us".
But are people hiding themselves from God? - because they do not want Him to exist, or perhaps because they are sub consciously afraid of Him?
Is that why I can't see fairies or goblins, but can see cows? How come Mrs. O. can see spiders when she's petrified of them? There are any number of people who want God to exist but still can't find him.
The evidence for God is all around us and within us, but many seem to be oblivious to it.
The problem with that is that you already need to think God is responsible for something in order to see it as evidence for gods. When you start from the available evidence, none of it leads to 'god'.
We have discovered a little scientific knowledge, and extrapolated it into an imagined scenario in which everything about our existence is explained in natural terms with no need for a creator.
Whereas we haven't discovered a creator, or anything spiritual, or any indication of life after death, and yet somehow you've extrapolate that into a specific God that doesn't like gayness or women, but really likes Israel...
So the reality is that we have a microscopic DNA molecule which contains within it all the information and mechanisms needed to build and maintain a complete human being - every hair, every brain cell, every blood vessel, every nerve, every muscle, every cell. And we are asked to believe that this truly mind blowing mechanism was brought about entirely by unguided natural forces which are demonstrably destructive in their nature.
The mechanisms involved are neither inherently destructive nor constructive, they are simply physical interactions: whether we consider them constructive or destructive depends on where we're standing when we do the watching.
As opposed to being asked to believe that an intelligence capable of engineering all that spontaneously sprang into existence from its own thoughts...
Even though the argument from incredulity is a fallacy, it's a fallacy that you compound by accepting a worse version as your alternative.
I put it to you that the billions of beneficial mutations needed to bring us into existence must have been brought about with forces guided by a precision beyond our comprehension.
And I put it to you that you very obviously fail to comprehend the vast numbers of physical interactions that have occurred in the history of the universe to result in this current state, that means despite the extremely low odds of each of the individual events happening, the number of attempts mean that the odds of the total happening somewhere are reasonable. It's only if you presume, arbitrarily, that this particular outcome was somehow an intention that this particular outcome becomes significant.
I will counter the inevitable accusations of personal incredulity with personal obliviousness to the obvious existence God's creative powers. The denial of these powers seems to be driven by a similar logic used to deny the obvious human ability to choose between good and evil.
Ah, so your failure to explain how something can be both will and free somehow justifies your equally baseless argument from incredulity about a natural universe in favour of a more improbable spontaneous, self-creating hyper-intelligence.
We need to wake up to the reality of God's existence, and the reality of our own free will which gives evidence to the reality of the human soul.
You know what, I find that hard to believe.
O.