Monarchy:
You can’t physically prove something doesn’t exist. This goes for any claim of existance, God, Santa Claus, Unicorns, Faries, Big Foot,etc… I feel it would be an abondonment of reason because you are asking me to take something as true which has many logical holes in it. For Example: The Bible is the Word of God, God is Perfect. If God wrote the bible it would be perfect, without a flaw. This is plainly not true. There are many inconsitoncies in the 4 gospels alone that would make me abondon reason to be a theist.
I see two possibilities, Monarchy. Either supernatural causes could possibly exist, or there must necessarily exist natural causes for the observable universe. I do not see a third possibility.
A person must choose between those two possibilities, or else remain ever in a state of uncertainty. If you will not choose between the two than the most you could ever say about God is “I do not know”. If however, you would make the statement “there is no God” (which I understand to be your position) then you have chosen the latter of the two possibilities, and this choice is a decision of faith…a faith for which there is no demonstrable proof.
Now then, getting back to your initial statement, why would you feel you need to abandon reason to believe in God (for which you see a lack of conclusive evidence) yet you can accept the alternative faith (for which there also is a lack of conclusive evidence)?
You mentioned the Bible. I think were getting ahead of ourselves here because we are merely talking about the possibility of God (not necessarily the God of Christianity). However, the short answer to your question about inconsistencies is that from a ciritical analysis perspective, the minor inconsistencies so often pointed out, actually
help the cause of Bible proponents. If for exampe, An Atheist’s theory is correct, and the miracles attributed to Jesus were merely a concocted set of stories, we would expect to see consistency, not inconsistency.
For example, in a court of law, if every witness gave the exact same testimony, it would actually cause more reason for doubt than if there were minor inconsistencies. Exact duplicate testimonies give reason to believe the testimony was contrived and agreed upon in advance. In reality, we know from daily experince that if 15 people witness an event, there will be 15 stories of what happened, each agreeing upon the primary events, but with minor inconsistencies in the details.
Your argument actually provides
more reason to give credence to the Biblical accounts. The reason we believe the Bible is perfect is not because of the concise historical accounts, but because the Bible is perfect in consistency of belief. It perfectly teaches what is was intended to teach. Any Christian (well, most Christians

) will agree it is not a science book, and it is not a concise chronological history. It helps us understand the faith. It was written by our Perfect God, but through flawed humans.
Monarchy:
What I was talking about was if a person came along, put a gun to my head and stated I needed to choose between religion (which is what I said in the first place) and science. Given a choice between them I would choose science. However I do not see them as contradictory, as long as they stay within the confines of their area of expertise. This means Science doesn’t try to explain the meaning of life, and Religion doesn’t try to explain how things happen.
Good thing nobody is holding a gun to your head forcing you to decide between the two

You are therefore free to accept both.
Your last two sentences are interesting. It is true that science is limited to the observable by definition. I am wondering why you feel that religion is limited such that it should not “try to explain how things happen?” So long as science does not disprove the claims of a religion, why shouldn’t it be free to explain how or why things yet unanswered through science have happened? If science does disprove a claim then you have reason to reject it, but if not, you would still not need to abandon reason to accept it.
Peace,
Chris W