Just because something can be explained by natural laws, it does not follow there is no God. There is absolutely no way science can disprove (or prove) God, since science is extremely limited to the finite, material, empirical world – that which is known or knowable thru the senses. Religion takes us to the “seen and unseen,” the “known and unknown.”
God and the spiritual are well beyond science. As John of the Cross said, our faith comes only thru one sense – our hearing of the Gospels. It is a matter of accepting thru faith, not scientific proofs. If we have some mystical experience that “spill all the beans” about God and the spiritual realm, then we don’t need faith. If we have whatever we want, then we don’t need hope. In Heaven we do not need faith and hope; in this mortal life we do, if we are to believe in God and His heavenly provisions.
Having said that, science is very good (but not perfect and definitive for all times) for what it can do – tell us about the material, empirical world.
My education started out in the “pre-big-bang” times and I learned something different about the universe…something that actually fit better with Hindu theology/myth. Of course, science cannot do experiments on the creation of the universe to tell us whether it was the big bang or something else. It is just a hypothesis, but I think based on some good (tho not perfect) science.
Our religious beliefs ultimately require pure faith. I’m thinking it actually takes much more grace and faith to believe not only the seen and known, but also the unseen and unknown. We tell ourselves in the Creed that we believe, but do we believe, and do we always believe at the same level – I’m thinking it actually fluctuates a bit, and we often tend to operate in the empirical, material world, without much thought to Divine Economy or God continuous working in our lives. For me God not only created the natural laws through with evolution and other natural phenomena happened, but was intimately IN EVOLUTION as it unfolded. For me, there is no concrete separation of God and evolution (or anything else), tho analytically we can “keep God constant and substract Him from the equation” to understand things from a scientific (material/empirial) view. (Science does that all the time – selecting only several factors to study, and ignoring all others.) But that does not in any way mean God does not exist, or is not intimately in and involved in ALL.
See, we have 2 eyes – one we can see things scientifically, one we can see God in all.
I suppose we should feel sorry for the agnostics and atheists, who just are unable (or unwilling) to take that “leap of faith,” but are stuck in the material universe. They are really missing out.
St. Therese of the Child Jesus spent her last year in complete dryness, with only the experience of how atheists would experience the world. She lived in pure faith, without spiritual consolations or inner spiritual solace, I think as a God-given penance/grace for the sake of those who do not have faith. Only in her last moment did she seem (from her radiant face and speaking directly to God) to experience the bliss and glory of God.