Yes I read you answer in the long post and the others, fine that all makes sense. My point is that if there is a god out there or not, human mythology, thought, discussions even the sum total of human knowledge cannot address it as it is not aware of what it is attempting to address.
Either it exists or it does not exist, we don't know and to claim one way or the other is delusional, or to place human thought on a pedestal of importance.
But that is not any kind of "point" at all.
Your first paragraph is just a re-statement of the incorrect claim that God is immune from investigation because it might be incomprehensible in its totality. The problem with that is simply that we don't need to comprehend God in its totality in order to tell if it's there or not.
Nobody on the Titanic needed to be able to recite the dimensions of the iceburg to know that their boat had hit one.
The second paragraph is just a re-statement of the incorrect claim that our limited knowledge makes God immune from refutation.
Look, either we're talking about something or we're talking about nothing.
If you're talking about something no one has ever imagined, then you're talking about nothing, because you have no idea what it is and neither do I.
But if you're talking about God, then you're talking about something, because people have believed in gods for a long time.
So we do know something about what God is, or we wouldn't be having this conversation. And if we know something about God, then God is refutable, even if we don't know everything.
The problem is, God has failed, so people wanting to cling to the idea (for whatever reason) always end up trying to de-define God... at which point we're back to talking about nothing.