You seem to be putting your empiricism against my faith. Empiricism is a belief or faith because the tenet of this is the only way to make decisions and have knowledge about the universe i.e. the only game in town cannot be established by science or methodological empiricism. I enjoy methodological empiricism too, recognise that it is reliable as you.
So there we are then you have a kind of hybrid empiricism as your belief and modus vivendi and methodological empiricism and I have christianity as my belief and methodological empiricism.
The LHC has a hatch into which you may enter if it is running to get the full effect and to partake in the reactions, similarly God has a hatch which you have referred to as ''the possibility of God.''
On the contrary, all I'm saying is that you can't expect me to believe in some god or other based upon what seems to me to be little more than your personal faith. As I can't find any reliable evidence, either empirical or historical, that suggests that any god is real and as I don't consider the idea of a god to be necessary or even useful(as in the first cause or design arguments, for instance), I consider that there is no reason to believe in any god. I suggest that is a rational approach. I would add to that, that the idea of a god has had little relevance for me, I have had no intuitive feelings for the presence of a god and no emotional attachment to a god(whether it be real or imagined), so why on earth shouldn't I treat a god as simply a possibility, and no more? Whatever you wish to believe is your own affair. All I'm saying is that you have never given any convincing justification for your belief as far as I am concerned, only that it is true for you.
To convince me, you would have to produce something a darned sight more reliable than you have so far. Failing that, the status quo prevails.
As far as your last paragraph is concerned, I was a member of a Methodist church for a number of years, being quite involved at the time in its youth fellowship, for instance, but never from the stance of a believer. I saw the reactions of those who did believe however, and was not particularly impressed. As that was such a long time ago, I decided several years ago to enrol in two Alpha course(one alone, one with my wife) in case I wasn't giving the Christian side a fair crack of the whip, so to speak. The result was, as far as I was concerned, complete disallusionment with the Christians involved including the message that they were purveying and a realization that for most of those involved it was little more than a social club.
At the start of this encounter, you asked two questions. I answered them honestly and directly, countered your objections and gave reasons for my attitudes. Obviously, as I expected, nothing has changed, you remain just as secure in your faith as before, I still have no belief in any god, including yours. I appreciate the time you have given, but, as far as I am concerned, there is little to be gained by continuing this particular exchange of views.