We are an insignificant species on an insignificant planet on the outer edge of an insignificant galaxy. Our hubris demands we be more than that. The universe doesn't care.
NCCommish: your response is precisely why I DO believe in a Creator. Do I believe in a white haired, white skinned grandpa sitting up in some cloud...watching all our lives intently, giving us a little assist or nudge when we need it, or hearing our prayers? No. But I do believe in panspermia. That Earth was "seeded" with life. Could have been by dumb-luck, could have been by design (I believe the latter). And that other life has given our planet, our species, a "nudge" from time to time. And probably within the next few hundred years, we'll be doing the same thing. Seeding some other planet/moon, either in our own solar system or another solar system, with life. "Creating" life on said worlds. The question is: will we be "God" to that world? Will people refer to "pillars of fire from the sky" or "angels" to describe what they were seeing...when our technology (thousands of years from now) will be thousands of years ahead of their own?
I'll agree with you. Humans aren't unique/special in the universe (multiverse?). Just one of probably millions/billions of intelligent species out there. Earth isn't unique either, in the big scheme of things. Nor is the Milky Way. But that leads me to suspect that the seeds of life found their way to Earth and evolved from other forms of life, not originating from Earth. And if life got here from "parts unknown," then to me, that introduces at least the potential for said seeds of life to be put here on purpose. Via a "Creator." Whether you call that Creator "God" or "Bob" or "Nyuck-Nyuck" doesn't much matter to me.
I get what you are saying but the reality is no creator needed. We know how life could have ended up here. Heck it could have come from Mars. But it doesn't take a conscious hand to do it. It just takes a meteor strike that transfers a simple chain of molecules. That's it. Introducing a maker doesn't make the process less complicated it complicates it infinitely, especially if we ascribe magical powers to that maker as we do with God.
All true. That said, I believe that much of our planet's ancient writings (i.e. the Bible) aren't just the result of someone's creative writing final after an all-night bender.

Such as Elijah being taken up into the sky in a "pillar of fire" (sure sounds like what we might refer to in modern times as a "rocket" or "spacecraft"). Or the flood of Noah's time (not covering the entire planet...but covering the entire region known to the people of the region and the author of the writings at that time). Or life on Earth being created in stages, as opposed to all those folks "clinging to their religion and guns," aka the idea that Creation occurred over ~144 hours (sigh).
If people were recalling and writing about events that ACTUALLY HAPPENED, the problem arises from:
1. People not understanding what they were seeing/experiencing (i.e. technology thousands/millions of years more advanced)
2. Other people reading said writings, and having the same problem
How long was it where civilizations around the planet thought a solar eclipse was the "gods" expressing anger/displeasure about something they were doing? Folks just didn't understand what was actually happening...so in their accounts, it became a "vengeful God" punishing them and/or an omen for some calamity to come. Did solar eclipses happen in the past? I HOPE you'd agree with me and say 'yes.'

Have people's understanding of said eclipses evolved and/or been refined as our knowledge about science/physics/astronomy has improved? Yes.
That's where you and I diverge in our beliefs. You believe that ancient writings are just fantastic fiction...probably meant to instill fear and control over a population. While I believe that many of the events that were written actually occurred...only that said witnesses didn't understand what they were seeing/experiencing, and took their best shot at interpretation. Which we've all been doing for thousands of years, ever since.