AB,
It all depends upon where the burden of proof lies.
No it doesn’t – the burden of proof lies with the person who makes the claim.
You claim your conscious awareness is determined by material reactions alone, with no knowledge of how.
No, I “claim” that the explanatory model that most closely aligns with the evidence and reasoning we have so far is a materialistic one. If you wish to replace that model with a different one you need to show that it better aligns with the reason and evidence we have so far.
You claim the universe is an unintended consequence of something, without knowing what that "something" is.
No, I “claim” that it’s a basic error in reasoning to assume that you were an intended outcome and then to marvel at the unlikeliness of that happening and calling that unlikeliness evidence
for the same god you needed to decide on you as the outcome in the first place.
I claim that our spiritual nature and awareness of God's presence is confirmed by divine revelation in scripture, personal prayer, miraculous divine intervention and personal witnesses from other people.
That’s just reason- and evidence-free assertion, and moreover it’s epistemically indistinguishable from reason- and evidence-free truth claims from
any faith traditions different from your own.
Neither of us can provide absolute proof of our claims which can be acceptable to the other person.
That’s called “going nuclear”: you seek to reduce both positions to just guessing, then claim them to be therefore equal. The cheat is that “absolute proof” – there’s no absolutes proof claimed in science in particular, but there are provisional explanations that are coherent, cogent and testable by experiment. We call these explanations “truths”. By contrast, religious claims have no coherence, no cogency and no means of investigation – thus there’s no good reason to think them to be true at all. Short version: the epistemic equivalence you’re trying for is bogus.
We each discern the truth from within our own existence.
Yes, but some truths are investigable and verifiable. That’s the difference between us – it’s the difference between reason and magic.
And there can only be one truth.
Nonsense. There are lots of truths, and even if there was one ultimate one we’d have no way to know we’d found it.
It is more than just belief.
Fine – demonstrate that then.
Listen to Stormzy's lyrics (btw I am not a fan of rap singers) and see how they are describing an experience of God.
Well that was stupid. They describe a
belief that he had an “experience of God”. I can write a song about meeting leprechauns if I want to – that would tell you nothing about whether they’re real though, no matter how sincere I was. You have all your work ahead of you still to show that the
belief is correct.
Perhaps you could come to believe after having a real experience of God in your life.
Perhaps you could come to believe after having a real experience of leprechauns in your life too. So what?
The trouble is that you can't experience God if you do not allow Him into your life. You could try opening the door to God instead of shutting Him out by finding reasons not to believe in Him.
That fallacy is called begging the question. You can’t “let into your life” something you have no good reason to think to be true in the first place. What you actually mean here is closer to, “the trouble that you haven’t abandoned your critical faculties as I have”. That much a least is true.