Let us look at this from a different perspective.
Religion and Science are both the result of some need.
What is the human need to know?
Humans are vulnerable and short-lived. Humans rely on their wits to survive in a hostile world. Man's reasoning power is his greatest tool of survival historically.
What man does not know he must guess at. A wrong guess can poison or cripple him.
Rather than guess outright, an experiment can often give clues to the true state of things BEFORE harm is done.
(A man sees berries growing on a bush. Should he eat them? He might be starving and simply not care to wait and observe the dead birds at the bottom of the bush before injesting them.)
Information is vital to correct choices about matters of life and death. Guessing and being wrong can kill you or endanger you and your loved ones.
Consequently, in the history of mankind there has been a steady progression of ways and manners of gaining information at the cheapest price that must be paid to injury.
Religion is man's first attempt at understanding the universe. It is mankinds way of making sense out of why things are the way they are by surrounding the details with a story and characters.
Next, philosophy was man's method of reasoning out cause and effect and the nature of things.
Eventually, experiments were used to test man's ideas and show them to be demonstrably true or false before accepting them.
As mathematics became more sophisticated its use to measure and quantify enabled experiments to be more and more precise.
Men who were not afraid to use their mind to discover how things worked and why created technologies that made life simpler, faster, easier and allowed more and more free time for enjoyment.
Somewhere along the line Religion and Science began to clash and became enemies.
Rather than submit to measurement, skepticism and demands for quantification and logical proofs; religious leaders became highly indignant and intolerant of being questioned.
Yet, religious men who possessed genius began trying to organize religious thinking into more logical presentations and arguments.
By the time of the Protestant Reformation men were ready for argumentation that pitted ideas against orthodoxies.
The by products of religion were always promises of a better tomorrow and mere persecutions and death today.
The by products of science were so many that the list has grown endless:
Identification of the causes of disease and infirmity and a methodology of treating sickness with innoculations, hygience, better diet and an understanding of germs and bacteria in food preservation and preparation.
Longer life-spans.
Living conditions improved and labor-saving devices gave families free time to spend more electively.
Transportation times were shortened.
Agricultural advances. More people could be fed on the same plot of land than ever before.
Refrigeration, air-conditioning, heating in the winter.
Heart transplants, artificial limbs, gene therapies.
Fertility clinics. MRI scans, X-rays, CAT scans.
Surgery. Anesthetic.
Computers, communication breakthroughs in radio, television, cellphones, satellite surveillance, Global positioning systems, radar, sonar, etc.
By the time all of us were born there was more luxury available at a cheaper price than ancient man ever dreamed of. Not a month goes by that some new breakthrough is not announced and it is commonplace to us so that we all just yawn and take them as a natural course of life on earth.
So, yes--we must CHOOSE between Science and Religion if we care about our mind.
Do we owe ourselves the best information possible about our planet, ourselves and our future? Do we want the clearest picture of how things really are, how they work and make the best decisions possible about our future?
Or, do we want to soothe fears and anxieties about our short life span and pretend there is a way out from superheroes in the sky who will save us?
The choice is clear.
Religion keeps us ignorant by feeding us a carrot at the end of a stick we never get a bite of. Relgion is comforting as a bedtime story where you live happily ever after.
Science deals with actual facts that can be measured and tested and makes predictions that are verifiable.
Religion is elusive and deliberately untestable in its mysticism.
Religion uses words with vague meanings that no two people agree on the definition of.
Science requires peer testing and verifiability.
There can be no middle ground between superstition and reality.
It is a kill and eat world. Elves do not make our shoes and Santa does not bring us presents.
The choice you make defines you as what kind of thinker you are. Are you an intellectually honest person? Or, do you prefer the pretty lie that makes you feel more secure?
Trying to have it both ways is greedy and unrealistically immature.
You cannot eat your cake and still have it. Sorry, but this is a fact that no religion can miraculously do away with.
The truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth cannot mix with myths, lies and exaggerations.
In any compromise between man and poison; the poison always wins.