Science can poison faith, too, by the way >____> But that's irrelevant.
I enjoy lying in bed, listening to the rain, and thinking about how things are going to grow, and how wonderful that is. There'll be little shoots of green grass coming up, as though to echo the Talmud, which writes: "Every blade of grass has an angel, which whispers to it 'Grow.'" And thinking about water, I think about the waves, the ponds, the pools, and all of the life they support. The magic of coming across a waterfall, when looking down one could almost think one had arrived at the end of the world.
I don't really think science will somehow be able to destroy that feeling. "God is not scientifically verifiable" does not mean some higher power is non-extant. Faith does not require blindness. It means being open to what is there.
Faith is certainly not the opposite of science. One must have faith that the scientific method will bring the correct answers, after all.
Refusing evidence because it contradicts faith sounds like a lot of bad scientists who fix results, by the way. The edifice isn't exactly unshakeable. It's a flawed, imperfect tool, like many others.
Might be a language barrier factor.
I think all three of us may have different native languages (I don't know if Tagalog is your first or not), but so far it seems that we're still having an argument based on ideas, not misunderstood words.