That is exactly what I want you to explicate with the question "What now?"
Remember the context is that God exists. So…What now?
I’m not sure what you are asking. The context is too open. Are you asking how does that effect our understanding of the universe? Are you asking how you should then live your life? Are you suggesting that knowing he exists does not change anything? Etc. Please clarify?
Does it enable us to understand the universe any better?
Depends on what you are trying to understand.
Well, the existence of a spaceless, timeless and immaterial creator takes care of abiogenesis, doesn't it? So what is left we don't know about the universe? There are lots of holes in our scientific body of knowledge, I suppose. A grand unifying theory, if one is possible, would be a great step forward in our understanding.
Again it depends what you are trying to understand.
Origin vs operational science.
Who is only part of the ”who, what, when, where, how,” mysteries.
Knowing he exists certainly helps us understand some origin issues of agency. Life. Information. Universe, space, time, matter energy. Fine tuning. Physical laws that govern his creation. Knowing he exists certainly impacts our understanding of morality, logic meaning, theology, philosophy, epistemology, etc
However, knowing he exists does not necessarily tell us how he did it or how his creation operates. But it would be a categorical fallacy to believe that it should in this sector of understanding. For example. Is it reasonable to assume that since we know that Frank Whittle is the agency of the turbojet engine that we would by that fact alone know how the turbojet engine works or why he created it? Your questions seem to be narrowly focused towards this fallacy.
Knowing he exists certainly helps us understand WHY is the universe so comprehendible? It would certainly clarify mind-body problem.
“What’s left?”
Meaning of life? Destiny? Revelation? How should I live?
How his creation works, why it works, what was its purpose? etc.
I have good reasons to believe God exists and I certainly possess a great many mysteries I strive to understand. So if you are possibly trying to infer that believing God exists leaves nothing left to understand then you are in error, for example I’m trying to understand what you are getting at here.
Have we made progress in solving the mystery of how the universe came about by invoking a mysterious creator?
Why would you assert that knowing the "who" implies knowing the "how"? That would be a categorical fallacy. You are conflating two different levels of explanation. Mechanism and agency. I guess there are some mechanistic insights to be gained by knowing the agency but to assert that we can gain an complete understanding of mechanism by knowing the agency does not seem rational.
You misread. I did not assert that knowing the "who" implies knowing the "how". I asked if knowing "who" helps us with the "how".
Reread the last sentence.
Does it lead us to the discovery of the meaning of life?
Good question. Given for sake of argument that God exists. Wouldn't there now be an objective meaning to life?
You just cast my question in other words. If your answer is "yes", please go ahead and explain how the existence of god leads to an objective meaning to life.
Remember the context….God the creator exists.
My response directly indicated that God’s purpose would be our objective meaning of life by overt default. How could there be another if we were created by God?