I'm not asking you to take everything these people say as gospel truth. That would be unreasonable and impossible as you can see. What I am saying is that what they say should strike you as odd, maybe make you a little curious. How can there be so many competing claims and all seem to be standing on equally valid logical (or illogical) ground. So by opening the door, you are opening the possibility that there is something out there.
What makes you think I'm not open to this possibility? I'm completely open to it. In fact, I used to be a theist. But the evidence right now indicates there isn't actually a God. Now, are you equally open to the possiblity that there isn't?
What makes you think I'm not curious? I spend huge amounts of my life learning about religion, including the fascinating question of why so many people believe in it.
Did you notice how you assumed that, because I disagree with you, it's because I'm close-minded? That would be convenient for you. What if the opposite is true? I disagree with you because I'm open-minded?
But that doesn't mean that something is out there. And you won't know what's out there until you "see" for yourself.
I see. So you're an agnostic?
It takes careful study and analysis of an ocean of beliefs. As you study what everyone "out there" believes, you can pick up a piece here and a piece there. As you continue to examine various ideas and religions the contents of your belief basket (not knowledge basket) changes and grows. Perhaps this is not even strong enough to be called belief.
Maybe you're so arrogant that you assume you can tell me how to go about my discovery process, having gone ahead of me? But maybe I did all that and more, and actually have spent much more time than you on the subject, know more than you, and don't really need advice from you?
Maybe it is just what you think would make sense if there was a God.
Or maybe it makes more sense that there isn't.
In this search for knowledge, you must act on everything you "learn".
Actually, you must not tell me what I must do. Shees, religionists are so freaking arrogant.
You can't think "Oh well that teaching sounds nice and I agree with it, but I'm not going to actually live it."
Or you might think, "What a crock of first-class bologna!! An angel showed him where to dig for the plates, but then, what a coincidence, took them back! And, lo and behold, everything in the book that we can verify, without exception, turns out to be wrong. No DNA, no metal tools, no horses, no chariots, no Egyptian, no nothing."
As you begin to apply the things you are learning into your life you will begin to feel something.
Or, on the contrary, you will not.
snip more annoying arrogant preaching on what I need to do and how I need to conduct myself.
Tell you what, before you start preaching at me how to discover and grow, let's get you a consistent belief system.
So, as I was saying, why aren't you Muslim?
Obviously, because you weren't raised by Muslims. So, is truth dependent on where you were raised?