ad,
I'm not saying that there's no room for reason, just that revelation trumps reason. My gripe with Protestantism is that it places reason above scripture and tradition. It's approach to the faith is speculative, in fact that is the problem with western Christianity as a whole ever since the schoolmen.
"...revelation trumps reason" eh?
Well...
First, if not by reason then by what means do you establish that something
has been "revealed" rather than written down and repeated?
Second, if you expect your claim to have had something revealed to you to be treated seriously, do you extend the same courtesy to anyone else who says that anything else has also been revealed to him - and, if you do, how would you avoid the problem that all such claims should thus be treated as equally (im)probable?
Third, does it not strike you as odd that the only people who have ever had something "revealed" to them are those already enculturated to whatever faith happens to do the revealing? You never for example find a previously undiscovered tribe in the Amazon jungle that also happens to know all about Christ and the resurrection. This is just as you'd expect it to be if your beliefs were actually memetic rather than revealed, but it would seem an odd way for god to behave - i.e., to "reveal" things only to those who happened to have been on contact already with the tenets of their religions.