Looking at the posts of non believers on this forum, the one thing they can agree on is their disbelief in the Christian God.
Actually non-believers by definition disbelieve in
all gods, exactly as Andy has already said. Your interpretation of your idea of a god may be special to you, but it isn't to anybody else. It doesn't have to be. Atheists disbelieve
all gods - that's what atheism
means. Yours is just one more on the list of thousands. Non-belief in deities is the only thing that unifies ... well, non-believers in deities. That's it.
From there we then have a multitude of different versions of what they do believe in
Such as what? You neglected to say, for some reason. What are you referring to? Philosophical beliefs? Moral beliefs? Political beliefs?
What we can conclude from this is that human beings are incapable of discerning the truth using their own powers of deduction, because they can't all be right.
Actually no, you can't conclude that at all, for the reasons given. Atheists disbelieve in gods for a variety of reasons but the essential ones, I should say, are that they find the very concept absurd and, in my case, not even wrong since there's no coherent definition of the thing. It's no good saying that there is or isn't evidence for this or that thing when that thing doesn't even have a clear, unified definition to start off with. Definition comes first, then evidence (or lack thereof) second, and in the case of gods it's abundantly clear that it's every man for himself in terms of what they purport to believe in.
Once you get past disbelief in deities, of course atheists hold different ideas about different things - people do have opinions, you know; it has been known. But the fact that people do so means precisely that - that they have opinions - not that your particular take on what you think is reality is thereby more likely to be true. And again, you forgot to say what these other things that atheists believe in actually are, in your opinion.
I accept that I am not able to figure all things out for myself, and human science is just scraping the surface of true reality with most fundamental things unexplained.
As yet. Given the staggering success of the scientific method or the scientific outlook in explaining things so far (and I do mean really, actually explaining things, not pretending to explain them as religions do) then my confidence that science will keep on finding out more and more about the universe is not a faith but a confidence both based upon and, arguably more importantly, justified by literally countless past successes in finding out what's the case.
So I put my faith and trust in what I believe to be the divine revelations of the true God.
Isn't it just amazing how you lot always have such incredible good fortune to end up believing in the true god and not any of those other false ones? You never hear any religio say: "I believe in this particular brand of/interpretation of a god, but it's the wrong one," do you?
Funny, that.