I see where you are coming from Tec — I was there for decades. Now, you make faith related to trust and obediance. Although partly true — Adamah well argued why this is missing the point.
(example; Noah did not build the ark so much on hope than obediance to the "assurance about what [he did] not see"... the second part of Heb.11:1)
Again, this is what I'm saying:
Religious Faith vs Empirical Knowledge
• religious |riˈlijəs|
adjective — (of a belief or practice) forming part of someone's thought about or worship of a divine being; treated or regarded with a devotion and scrupulousness appropriate to worship
• faith |fāTH|
noun — complete trust or confidence in someone or something. According to Heb. 11:1 ~ "Faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see."
• empirical |emˈpirikəl|
adjective — based on, concerned with, or verifiable by observation or experience rather than theory or pure logic
• knowledge |ˈnälij|
noun — what is known in a particular field or in total; facts and information.
Facts, information, and skills acquired by a person through experience or education; the theoretical or practical understanding of a subject.
Both Religious Faith and Empirical Knowledge need specific sources to prompt a belief.
We either freely choose or follow our environment/upbringing in the SOURCES of our convictions.
TRUST is the first element that will generate religious faith or empirical knowledge.
A) — Religious Faith is born from:
1) — TRUST in a chosen source
2) — HOPE that all that is promised will happen
3) — BELIEF with no need for any visible or tangible evidence.
B) — Empirical Knowledge is born from:
1) — TRUST in a chosen source
2) — QUESTIONING that all it predicts or presents is valid
3) — BELIEF if the evidence and logic produces verifiable facts.
BELIEF in itself is NOT a choice. Again, only the our SOURCES we trust are a choice.
Theoretically, any conviction should present a good argument that make epistemic sense; meaning it should be falsifiable to prevent unattackable, isolated, and intrinsic circular arguments.
This is why Faith is not debatable. It lives outside reason, as it does not demand explanation, justification nor empirical proof. Faith is primarily based in emotion, rather than reason, although there is a close connection between the two.
One must not confuse the words Trust and Faith to disingenuously level the playing field.