I always find it arrogant when internet atheists are so condescending toward people of faith because in their minds they somehow have exclusive rights to science. This only highlights your ignorance of scientific history. Many of the greatest scientists that ever lived were theists and/or Christians. The belief that God created the physical world and designed our cognitive abilities in such a way that we can make sense of that world, is in absolutely no way an obstacle to scientific discovery, but actually an aid to it. (Christian philosopher Alvin Plantinga makes the argument that you have no reason to trust your cognitive faculties as guides toward truth, on atheism, only survival - but I won't go into that here.) Yes, some people of faith have some beliefs that are not supported by science, but so what? Many non-monotheists and atheists also believe many foolish things. To deny that human life begins at conception is just as demonstrably false as denying that Earth is round. Yet many atheists do this very thing.
Many consider the men Roger Bacon (a Catholic friar [monk]), Francis Bacon (a devout Anglican Christian), Rene Descartes (Christian philosopher), Galileo (devout Roman Catholic, despite his persecution), and Isaac Newton (Christian, and arguably the greatest scientist who ever lived) to be central figures in the fashioning of the modern scientific method. Some, if not all of these same men were explicitly critics of atheism. Newton considered it foolish. There are many other giants in science who were men and women of faith. Discovering the mysteries of the universe the Creator made out of nothing outside of himself, is just as profound or more so than discovering the mysteries of a supposed accidental universe that came from nothing and with no purpose. The "Big Bang Theory", by the way, was first proposed by a Catholic priest (with a Ph.D. in physics), the "Father of the Big Bang", Georges Lemaître.