But when you come across something which is impossible to explain in material terms, you can't just hide behind the "can't be explained" banner. If something is impossible to be defined within the limits of material science, you need to come to terms with the possibility, or probability that the supernatural exists.
Illogical nonsense.
It's
literally impossible to know whether something can be explained in material terms, without claiming to be omniscient about the material universe.
This is one of the major school-level logical blunders you make all the time. All we can say is that something is impossible to explain within our
current understanding of physics (which we currently
know is incomplete). Even if we had a tested "theory of everything", we still couldn't
know that that was all there was to know about the material world.
If something can be made to make
logical sense, we can't know that there isn't a material explanation.
If something doesn't make
logical sense (such as your nonsense version of "free will"), it's impossible anyway,
regardless of any posited supernatural realm.
The only escape is to say that the supernatural can include the
logically impossible, so it could include (say) square circles. If you go down that route, then logic is literally useless and you can't possibly have a reasoned argument for it.
You continually make the simple, basic mistake of confusing logical impossibility with the limits of the material world. As I said before, you seem to understand nothing at all about logic (hence all the fallacies) and you care about it even less (hence you never respond when people point out your fallacies).