edit; ya move the topic to debates
By any logical standard if there was any evidence for the existence of god, that would make faith irrelevant.
That faith is needed in the religious community reasonably means that zero evidence is in existence to prove god is real.
A problem I see is you are already approaching this from a perspective which excludes anything you don't agree with as not a "logical standard". I'm not even sure what you mean by "logical standard". Is this something we can measure or objectively define?
However I do agree with what you are trying to say though, saying that the necessity of faith would indicate that one can't believe on evidence. A valid point, but not everyone hinges their beliefs on faith.
I know personally I've been a little harsh to people who bevel a religion purely out of faith and not experiences. I almost want to say intellectual reasoning to but I find most justifications of that sort severely lacking, at least when it comes to Christianity and Islam, which to me seems to always be the two that are faith based. The ones that are not so faith based I find to usually have a better justifications.
First, there is no evidence for god's existence; thus, why those who believe in god rely upon faith to believe in god.
This is incorrect because you're assuming there is only faith and one version of "evidence". Many people have had experirences, eitehr spiritual, mystical or for some even supernatural, that would convince them, as very direct evidence, that god exists.
In any kind of supernatural, laymen sense of the word, I would agree that "God" probably doesn't exist, but I'm not willing to say that everyone who does does so
solely on faith. If anything, most people believe on some degree of instinct (or so it would seem).
I also wouldn't say that those with good philosophical arguments believe so on faith, since they believe based on a compelling argument congruent with their philosophy.
In the same way you feel certain axioms are "self apparent" so they too might feel other ones are, and as an eventual conclusion of those axioms, come to the eventual conclusion that something that might be called "God" exist.
How is one "convinced" that god exists? Doesn't there need to first be proof of that god's existence?
There could be a proof as in a logical conclusion by philosophy or theology, or direct experience which one would constitute as proof.