He wasn't defining faith. He was making a distinction between faith and science, one that continues to elude you. And the only propaganda and "pile of shit" here is your utter ignorance about science and empiricism. Really it's embarrassing. It's very clear that you're dictating abstract terms of argument (that Faith doesn't have to be held to the same standard and can still be Truth) because your position IS weak. Because Faith won't hold up to scrutiny. It doesn't have to if you leave it in the realm of Faith. But you trying to purport it as Absolute Truth and claiming it meets a higher critical standard than Science quite frankly makes you look insane.
And I'm still waiting to hear how -- other than "It's in the Bible" -- a man can be raised from the dead or a woman can give birth without procreation.
He gave a definition of faith, and so did you: that it refuses to consider evidence, that it is the opposite of wanting to know the truth.
I'm trying to instruct about systems of thought, and how you can't hold the standards of one over another and get anywhere -- and all you do is reiterate that unless it's empiricism it can't have truth.
You're taking a position of faith, because that's the only way that empiricism can claim to be the only way to truth -- it can't be proven, in any fashion. To support your faith, you claim that "Faith" rejects evidence -- and when I point out that such a definition has nothing to do with the faith the Bible speaks of, you fall back on claiming that empiricism is the only route to truth.
I understand empiricism and science; I got a science degree, magna cum laude. I know that empiricism cannot deny other avenues to truth, because the claim is not "only what can be known empirically can be known", but "we seek to know what can be known empirically". The first is a statement of faith, the second a statement of procedure.
In other words, you're claiming things for science that science can't claim: it doesn't say that truth is limited to what can be empirically known, only that its reach extends only to what can be empirically known.
You're putting words in my mouth again, Nik -- if you'd stop doing so, you'd see more clearly. I said nothing about a "higher critical standard", I made a comparison of the level of claims: that assertions of faith claim a higher standard than the assertions of science.
But there's no point to going on. You've demonstrated a total inability to even recognize you're bound by a worldview, let alone to step outside it and consider that there are other ways of looking at things. To you, if it isn't empiricism, it isn't logical -- which is false, and you might even concede it's false, but you go right back to doing it. Logic makes no claims about how all systems are to be measured, it only applies once there are axia, and then it can tell you whether those are consistent. Attempts to impose the axia of science on everything just makes you foolish -- they don't work on poetry, or love... unless you're willing to reduce us all to meaninglessness, the product of nothing but random chance.
Every charge you've laid against faith arises from having your own worldview and insisting it's right, from insisting that your definitions are the only ones -- and never bothering to look at the system of thought you're criticizing. That's true of falcon and some others as well; you're all trying to make everything materialistic and empirical -- but that contradicts your own stance, because there's no empirical evidence that everything is material and empirical.
Concerning water changed to wine, BTW, of course science isn't going to be able to address that, and you're not going to be able to explain it in scientific terms -- that's why the people back then called it a miracle: they knew it didn't happen that way, that nature only produced wine from water via the intermediary steps of vines, grapes, juicing, and fermentation. A miracle by definition lies outside the purview of science; it's an intervention from outside, an input not through the ordinary channels -- and science addresses, and can address, only what comes from inside the system, what comes through ordinary channels.
So, really, a challenge to show how water can become wine, using science, shows that you don't even know what science is.
Try becoming aware of your own worldview. Try taking some courses -- philosophy, language, anthropology, anything -- that will show you different ways of looking at the world. Heck, even Spanish will show that there are different ways of looking at the world, ones English doesn't contain! Try ancient Greek (classical, Koine), and stretch some more -- try ancient Hebrew, and really strain your brain!
Once you get it into your head that their worldviews would regard your faith in empiricism as ludicrous, you might have a chance of understanding that just because it isn't part of the system you trust doesn't mean it's beyond logic.