Reasoning actually "melts" away faith ideas. We can all agree that there are "grains of truth" hidden in mounds of supernaturalist bullshit but they only bear fruit once seperated from it.
Fact is, there are no valid theological claims unless they can be backed up with evidence. Thus, there is no connection between the processes of reason and faith. Nobody has ever demonstrated a single article of faith that can be demonstrated through reason.
I guess your point is more psychological than anything else. A simple corollary would be not the necessity of the interconnectedness of reason and faith. If all you're discovering is personal, subjective perspective and perception, you're not actually finding out anything and quite possibly reinforcing false personal perceptions, thinking that reason and faith are compatible. No Sir, they are not!
Fact is, there are no valid theological claims unless they can be backed up with evidence. Thus, there is no connection between the processes of reason and faith. Nobody has ever demonstrated a single article of faith that can be demonstrated through reason.
I guess your point is more psychological than anything else. A simple corollary would be not the necessity of the interconnectedness of reason and faith. If all you're discovering is personal, subjective perspective and perception, you're not actually finding out anything and quite possibly reinforcing false personal perceptions, thinking that reason and faith are compatible. No Sir, they are not!