Your googled answer does nothing to explain the complexities of faith, and what it means to individuals.
Why are you so afraid of learning and remembering stuff that on an almost weekly basis you sling around the (needless to say, entirely unevidenced and unprovable) accusation that people Google stuff instead of having learnt and remembered it? This is a rare, sad and sour nadir of anti-intellectualism. Some people possess intellectual curiosity. Others possess memories. Some possess rather good memories.
The quote from Hebrews 11 is a very familiar phrase long established in the English language and very familiar to almost anyone passionately dedicated to the English language and the Western literary canon, of which the King James Bible or Authorized Version forms so large a part.
I don't know whether you're disturbed by the fact that some people know their Bible as literature but simply don't believe a word of it as a reflection of reality/divinely revealed truth, or what. I can do the same with Juan Mascaro's translations of the
Bhagavad Gita and the
Dhammapada (the ones I grew up on, and still my favourites) at the drop of assorted headgear, if required, and despite an enduring attraction to some - only some - aspects of both this makes me neither a Hindu nor a Buddhist.
Don't judge others by your own deficiencies.