I think you are entirely right that you cannot explain faith to someone who has never experienced it. It is clearly something that is very important in your life and I am glad for you. It clearly feels right for you. Just don't expect me to understand it!! 
Just out of interest, were you brought up in a Christian family?
For context, I had a mixed upbringing. My father was what I would call a raving atheist - he was very damaged by and bitter about the war - it turned him from a practising Christian (although I only know that because his mother told me - he said nothing about it) to someone who felt that goodness had left the world. My mother was brought up a Catholic and had a deep hatred of that religion - her father was brought up in a Catholic children's home, where unspeakable cruelties and indignities were perpetrated on him. During her adult life she vaguely sought to find some sort of faith and we children were dragged around various different churches for a while, then she gave it all up.
My first 3 years of schooling were in a private C of E school run by nuns - I was sent there because the local primary was not thought to be good enough. I hated the place. I was terrified of the nuns and even more terrified of the utterly grim near-life size carvings of the stations of the cross and the crucifixion - truly truly grim. The stuff of nightmares to a child. I still cannot understand how people can stand up in church and sing happy hymns with images of blood and cruelty in front of them.
No wonder I have decided that just being as kind as I can has to be the way forward.
Shropshire homes for migrants on hold!
respite from England football team this coming early Monday morning?



