as I say, you have already decided that these books are not what they claim to be i.e. about the Divine
What I reject is that the scriptures are FROM a divine author. I would also add that I have no reason to believe that anyone knows anything ABOUT any god including whether they exist, what they think, or how they are.
But to address your comment, yes, I've already examined the relevant available evidence and arrived a conclusion based on it. As I wrote, "I offered you a chance to share some of this truth, and you declined." You still do, only now you seem to be asking what would be the point as if my mind were closed. It's the opposite. I've asked you repeatedly for additional evidence that might change my mind, and none has been forthcoming, so the conclusions I came to on the existing evidence remain unchanged.
back to the same old "God hasn't shown himself" stuff.
Back to the same old unbelief absent sufficient reason to believe. That's not going to change. You seem to object.
Let me think back 45 years ago, and analyse why I became a Muslim. I was reading the Bible, which was the Holy book I was raised with as a Protestant in the UK, and started questioning why Christians weren't following the OT, despite it being part of the Bible. This happened as I met Muslims when I moved to Birmingham UK. It was both rational and social. I learned more about Islam and attended a mosque with other new Muslims. I found a lot of new books, containing religious knowledge, and began to practice my new faith. I had a positive experience, had nothing but praise for God in the help that I have received. Going back to my previous state, was not something I view as positive, even though I know it can happen.
It's nice to know something about you. UK, formerly Christian, probably about my age (68 yo) if you changed religions 45 years ago.
But I wrote, "Right now, I think you believe that by faith, that somebody has told you that those words contain truth and wisdom, and that you repeat it not realizing that you have insufficient evidence to support that contention and have believed it anyway." Did you think you addressed that with your comment? I still think that you say that holy books contain truth and wisdom not because you have found any there, which I assume that you would have shared with the thread already if you had, but because others told you that they do, you believed it uncritically, and now you repeat it. If that's incorrect, you ought to be able to show how. If you can't or won't provide new evidence that contradicts that, why would I revise it? As I indicated earlier, I think your beliefs are comfortable for you and that's why you hold them and that's why you call them truth.
that leaves you without any chance of "knowing God", because you have decided that you don't need to find spiritual truths, as it is so easy to dismiss them all as "unlikely" and unhelpful.
That's incorrect. I didn't decide that I didn't need to find spiritual truth. I decided that there probably is no such thing as I define truth. You may recall that my words were "If you're correct, you should be able to provide an example of an ascertained spiritual truth. You can't. I know this because I know how truth is ascertained, and also because I have asked at least a half dozen RF posters who made the same claim to give me one of these truths and explain what makes it truth. They can't."
We'll never know what truth you have that I would have dismissed, will we? You've offered none, as predicted.
God knows why some people are attracted towards the Divine, and others are not. It isn't about rationality, but the needs of our soul.
This is theology as I've defined it. You posted, "Theology is the systematic study of the nature of the divine and, more broadly, of religious belief." To me the systematic study of nature is science, not theology, and the systematic study of religious belief only theology when believers are doing it about their supernatural beliefs. If it's comparative religions, then it is social science, not theology.
You also posted, " It is possible to make rational conclusions .. it depends on the criteria used, and on the topic." As I've explained, theology is meaningless to me, an unbeliever, since it is predicated a god existing and man knowing something about it. It is impossible to generate sound conclusions from untrue premises. Believing them is irrational.
Some people have a strong faith due to knowledge
Not as I define knowledge, which is akin to truth and fact. Once you have sufficient knowledge to justify a belief, that belief is no longer believed by faith. Believing with less is faith. They are mutually exclusive categories. All beliefs are one or the other, and none is both or neither.