although time is finite, space is ever expanding.
Eh... kind of... black holes tend to fuck that up. I thought the big bang said that the universe collapses upon itself then bangs out again in an endless cycle? Pretty sure that makes time infinite... maybe it's countably infinite. If space is infinite, time most definitely has to be. Wouldn't make sense if the fourth dimension didn't map one to one onto the three other dimensions, would it? I think that it is all considered to be countably infinite though because of the oscillations (big bang suggests that the universe just keeps repeating itself, kind of like a sine wave... it blows up, goes back in... etc.)
But anywho... using the same lame cop out arguments to try and prove religion is weak at best. I'm not against religion, I'm against really stupid justifications of it. If you want to believe, please do. People who actually follow what religious leaders say (Jesus, Krishna, etc) tend to be really great people. Dumbasses who try to force feed religion onto others cause wars (Jihad, Christians from 500-1700 ACE, etc)
"Our minds are finite, how can we understand an infinite mind" or whatever, is almost as lame as "You can't disprove or prove that their is a God." The first quote shows a pretty huge misunderstanding of the term infinite. I'm assuming when infinite is used in that quote it is meant to say, God's mind is way too huge so we can't comprehend it. Well... what you're referring to is uncountably infinite. A set is uncountable if its cardinal number is larger than that of the set of all natural numbers. Now, does that really make sense when referring to God? No. What about countably infinite? It means that the cardinality is the same as the natural numbers... still makes no sense. Furthermore, you would also need to clarify exactly what the criteria is for having a so called infinite mind... if you mean number of brain cells, well that kind of makes sense. But why would God have brain cells... and furthermore, if she did have brain cells, then she would have to be a tangible being living amongst the universe. Since we are supposedly the chosen people, I would assume that God would be chillin' out on earth. Obviously this is not the case. So number of brain cells can't be what that quote implies.
Well then, how about number of choices a person could make. Well funny thing about that, through Schrodinger's principle we can derive that for every action, there are infinite alternate universes where every other possible action happened. Since there is an infinite amount of universes for all of these actions, then the human brain must be "infinite" in this sense, so that can't be what the quote implies.
Religion shouldn't be something that people get in arguments about trying to prove. It ought to be something that people can learn something from IF THEY SO CHOOSE. Jesus, The Buddha, Krishna, Lao Tzu, etc were all great people, and valued peace. We can all learn something from those amazing people, it's when one becomes way too defensive about religion and starts going against their own religion to prove a point that makes people wonder what good religion has done for the world.