Speaking as someone who has been where your uncle is (edit:was), I don't hear it discussed much how tempting religion is to scientific/nerdy types, or anyone with a thirst for knowledge.
If you believe your religion's scriptures are an infallible set of truths handed down from above, then you've got the secrets of the universe in your hand and all you have to do to expand your knowledge is deduce correctly from that. It's an addictive hobby, and much easier and less messy than real science, where there's no final authority and you have to work for years to make a small discovery in one area and even then you might fail. Isaac Newton himself got caught up in that sort of thing.
Now, I'm just having fun - I disagree with the premise of this article if it states the universe is young or some bs like that, that said I am leaning more to the universe being a created thing than I'm not, like I'm 90% sure this was made - 10% with serious doubts.
I have conducted my share of comparative theology - I've read everything that's come out of the ground but that isn't where I arrived at this conclusion. Science keeps presenting me with proof of the universes construction.
Most recently I encountered this patent form the 1990s - since has been vastly expanded upon but this actual patent is fairly damning to any "random universal generation" concepts bc what it utilizes kinda can't exist and yet it does.
How can a species evolve so that it's behavior can be exactly controlled and dicted by a noise at a frequency it cannot hear and is undetectable outside it's effects?
That is that patent - we are that species, a noise I cannot hear or detect in any way can me have to shit. Or fight. Or fuck.
The reverse is also true. If you're a nerdy type, physics' power of prediction can lead you to think the whole of reality could be explained in principle by physics. But there's of course no good reason for making this leap. Physics explicitly limits its scope to the material, so cannot be used as an argument that the material is everything.
I love that you just dismissed Isaac Newton's greatest curiosity as "an addictive hobby" - that may in fact be the best understatement of the quest for the "philosopher's stone" that I have yet encountered.
Perhaps there is a reason some of the smartest of us, for millenia, have fallen into this particular rabbit hole.
I also want to establish that Isaac Newton's quest was not inherently a religous one - the was very opposed to alchemists.
Do you really believe it was spirituality that motivated Isaac Newton? He already believed in God - the subject of his final research was something more tangible, which makes sense considering he was a scientist ;)
As someone who went to Seminary in my misspent youth I can't agree more.
Theology is a huge nerd snipe. Isaac Newton is my go to example for how it's a fixation with a extremely vicious cycle. There are whole manifestations of OCD that are just focused on religion as the core OCD fixation.
If forced to choose between owning a dishwasher, washer, dryer, AC, etc.... I would give up every moment of theology training, argument, etc. and keep the tech.
A big part of the difficulty with theological training is most people are graduating from schools that push hermeneutics that encourage tortured logic of the text. Ultimately training people primarily not to identify truth claims or evaluate propositions but to tie intellectual knots and take primrose paths that fall apart with any holistic scrutiny. Just read the papers coming out and you can easily see that people are graduating with PHD's in mental gymnastics.
All the good I've brought into the world, all the lasting things I've done and they have not had anything to do with theology.
My parents were academics who got nerd sniped by theology as well, the few times they stepped outside of theology they did so much good but all that time spent in theology just left them penniless and, ultimately, dying terribly early.
Myself, on the other hand, I spent seven years earning my MDiv in the early days of my career as an engineer, and have found it quite worthwhile. Perhaps the difference is that I still consider the most important thing about my existence to be that I am in Christ.
You might be less prone to being nerd sniped as well. Being employed as an engineer while completing an MDiv certainly speaks to a certain healthy degree of mental balance. Certainly higher educations that focuses on reading comprehension/understanding will have a broad positive effect, as will being a respected and educated (high status for some value of status) individual in a close knit community.
I think how devout a person is matters a lot, my parents always gave away their 2nd cloak away and I've known very few christians stateside who live with a believable degree of piety.
My parents would literally give up a dishwasher, dryer, car, computer, etc.. without second thought when it served the mission and they intentionally put themselves in places where that would be the case. Finding ways to isolate yourself from seeing others needs is a very common way of following the letter but not spirit of NT teaching.
I think north american christians typically have the best life outcomes when they practice restricted piety instead of taking NT injunctions seriously or literally, which is just a hedge of course against the existential doubt that seems to drive a persons observable behavior.
Agree or disagree with them but my parents also had a hundred fold (more than that actually, when I really think about it) return in reaching people, I don't know many NA christians who have had even 30 fold return, which definitely makes me question what type of seed NA christians tend to be. I've heard some very devout missionaries say that there they suspect there are very few christians left in NA and based on numbers alone many churches seem to be reaping negative numbers and the rest are growing through absorbing other groups.
I am humbled by their selflessness. Intellectually it can be so challenging to be a Bible-believing Christian in modern day Western culture, but I pray you will make your way back into the fold.
If you believe your religion's scriptures are an infallible set of truths handed down from above, then you've got the secrets of the universe in your hand and all you have to do to expand your knowledge is deduce correctly from that. It's an addictive hobby, and much easier and less messy than real science, where there's no final authority and you have to work for years to make a small discovery in one area and even then you might fail. Isaac Newton himself got caught up in that sort of thing.