I feel like what I'm seeing here is a trend of people who disbelieve in the supernatural, whether it pertains to God or not. There seems to be an attempt to rationalize everything into a nice tidy box of logic and objective truth and ignore all of the anomalies and outliers that have existed for as long as human beings have documented our experiences.
For the supernatural to even exist, it needs to be supernatural. In other words, there must be no possible way to rationally explain it. This is of course different from the case where no one knows how to explain it, and unless we've literally tried
everything to explain something, there's always the possibility that an explanation still exists. This basically means that it's pretty hard to classify something as outside of logic and be correct. Outliers and anomalies are simply the unexplained
for now. There are literally too many examples of "time leading to the answer" to count in human history.
I'm very hesitant to label anything as super natural. If I saw a ghost, I wouldn't right away assume that all the stuff I've seen on TV about ghosts was true. I would conduct research and try to find out how ghosts operate, or how the mind creates a ghost through false perception (ie a white bed sheet). Out of all the ghost sightings in the world, a large number are probably people misinterpreting something, and the rest are unexplained. I don't think there has ever been an accepted case of a genuine ghost sighting where said ghost was a spirit that used to be a person. That's pretty convincing evidence against ghosts.
I don't think that the people who reject God and the supernatural are close minded. They're simply not gullible or easily convinced. God pretty much has no choice except to operate objectively and within logic or else he would be indistinguishable from chance. He can be everywhere at once, he can see everything, he can create Suns by snapping his fingers; that's completely fine. However, if a city prays for protection from earthquakes, and only 1 in every 10 earthquakes causes major damage, that does nothing to justify the power of prayer. They just happen to be in a region where 1 in 10 earthquakes is devastating. It
could be true that God stops every earthquake up to the 9th, but there is no way to verify it. People feeling an overwhelming sense of relief, or some kind of great presence isn't proof. That's most likely the people rejoicing over not having been crushed by falling buildings.
That is why prayer doesn't prove anything. There is no object measure of the benefits. Some prayers come true, and this is only because probability says they must. It's the same thing when someone reads a line from the Bible and it has immediate relevance in their life.
You can claim that God operates beyond logic, but when you do, you simply make it pointless to even discuss him. Without logic or reasoning, not even religion can reach God.