No doubt that there are laws in science, the discovery of which depended on the abilities and diligence of its discoverers, without whom, perhaps, they would still remain a mystery.
The idea of the knowability of the world is not the product of any simple faith, but the result of human intellectual efforts to dominate the public spiritual element, which has become helpless before Its Majesty — Rationalism.
The truthfulness of faith is determined by the meaning of its confession, i.e., its ability to contribute to the development of an individual and society.
What do different currents of thought have to say about God and the universe? Theism — God created the world and manages all its events; Deism — God established the universe but doesn't interfere with it; Panentheism — God includes the eternal universe, and also exists above it; Pandeism — God, upon the creation of the world, became one with it, and is now the universe itself; Pantheism — the universe is equated to God, or is seen as sacred; Atheism — the absence of belief in anything supernatural, or the belief in the existence of nature only; Agnosticism — the answer is not yet known, or is entirely unfathomable.