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I don't know why you assume that facts are the only aspect of the world. Especially ones which are distinctly either true or false. You must miss out on so much of the color of existence with that outlook.
As an example, I like athletic dark haired girls. It just does something for me. It's my belief that tight bodied athletic girls are as hot as they can be.
Let's say that you like thicker blondes. Well, you're obviously wrong.
Subjective opinions are not the same thing as objective facts. I don't object to religious opinions; there is no point in doing that. If a Muslim says he likes wearing turbans, or if a Hindu says he hates the smell of beef, or if a Christian says he finds thievery immoral, nobody can argue with those opinions. But if a Muslim says that there is a supernatural intelligence who wants us to wear turbans, or if a Hindu says that there is a supernatural intelligence that doesn't want us to eat cows, or if a Christian says there is a supernatural intelligence that wants us to refrain from stealing, those are claims of objective truth. All religions are full of claims of objective truth. When someone claims there is a God, that there is no hell, or that we all have immortal souls, those are claims about reality that can either be true or false. There cannot be one God and many gods and no gods all at the same time. There cannot be a hell and no hell at the same time. We cannot both possess and lack immortal souls. Just because nobody has mustered up any good objective evidence for their religious claims does not exclude them from the realm of claims about objective truth.
Not really though, because of course, just because something is true for me, doesn't necessarily mean its going to be true for you. My truths don't render your own truths false.
Your opinions don't render my opinions false. However, we still inhabit the same objective reality, where truths are truths and falsehoods are falsehoods for all observers. Subjectivity has to do with your personal emotional reactions to the objective things you perceive; objectivity encompasses everything else, including the existence or non-existence of supernatural entities.
You're thinking of god as this massive objective force. But if god is everywhere, then he's also a part of you, or maybe, you're just a part of him... So of course subjectivity is going to come into play. How do you understand god? It has to be on your own terms.
If God exists, then he must have some objective reality. The problem with your argument is that you are not defining the term "God". If there is an entity out there worthy of the name "God", then it must have some attributes which make it a god and differentiate it from things which are not gods. If it does not have any attributes that you can define, then the term "God" becomes utterly meaningless, and you might as well just substitute it with another meaningless word like "flubbertygoo" because you're not going to be able to make any coherent sentences with it. However, if it is an entity with certain definable attributes, then it must lack other definable attributes, and thus it becomes part of objective reality. It is logically possible for something to be beautiful for you and ugly for me (because it triggers different neurochemical reactions in our different brain structures), but something cannot logically exist for you and not exist for me.
Tell me, are all universal forces aspects of the same primal force? I know they've theoretically unifed the weak and strong nuclear forces to electromagnetism... but gravity remains apart thus far. What do you think though, if you had to guess beyond the evidence, is there simply one universal force emanating in multiple ways? Or are their multiple forces interacting?
That's a physics question. If there is only one unified physical force, I think it's misleading to call it "God" with all the supernatural baggage that word holds. "God" implies an entity that has consciousness, intelligence and personal relationships with human beings, which electromagnetism, gravity, etc. do not.
And lastly, would it matter?
Yes, it would matter a lot. If there is a deity out there, I would be very interested in knowing what its attributes are, how I can obtain knowledge about it, what role it plays in cosmology, how it alters events in our universe, etc. In fact, I cannot think of anything whose existence would be of more importance.