I'm very impressed by the people here who know everything there is to know and therefore have no interest in "faith".
Isn't faith in this context the way in which we understand and interpret the universe around us, even the little bit that we inhabit? The "facts", whether we gather them for ourselves or (more likely) rely on other people to wrap them up and present them to us, point in many different directions: a world where everything is governed by pure chance (hydrogen atoms banging into each other until they produce Shakespeare) is only one interpretation, though currently very attractive.
It's the search for meaning or purpose that drives us to think up and respond to alternative structures, including the religious ones. Abstract ideas that seem to be commonplace - beauty, justice, truth and so on - keep on suggesting to us that there is more to life than a series of unrelated accidents. We want to have meaning, even if in the end it is to arrive at the faith that there is no meaning, or that the only meaning is what we create for ourselves.
I personally find meaning - sometimes against the evidence - in believing (trusting, having faith) that the universe is not a pointless, accidental place, that it (and its temporary residents) have character and purpose. What that purpose and character is is another discussion.
Just to dismiss "faith" as blind and stupid itself has no meaning, coming as it does from a belief, a faith, that we already know everything we need to know.