What is wrong with saying that? A ball can not roll uphill because it obeys the law of gravity. It has to fall down. The question is, "Who put this law into place?" If you say "no one," then we must ask why the ball obeys gravity? If the universe was godless, why not expect some things to fly up at random intervals?
Again you do not understand what law means in scince.
A ball rolling down hill does not 'obey the law of gravity' as if it were determined by a law of science. Laws are descriptions of observation by humans.
When we say a falling object obeys gravity it is just a manner of speaking. It does not conform to our laws of science, our laws of science are derived from observation and experiment. Outside of the math we are stuck with the limitations of language. Reality does not conform to science, science conforms to reality.
No agent or creator or purpose to reality is indeed.
Things work the way they do because that is what reality is.
But you expect things to fall down. Who says that tomorrow things won't fall up? Is there a 100% guarantee gravity will work tomorrow? If not, how can it be a law? At best you can say, "we are 99.9% sure it will work tomorrow." Is that a law?
If science conforms to reality, then all scientists should be scared to death that things might get tragic any second! Anything could change on a whim if reality can do anything it wants! But, we don't see anything changing on a whim.
BTW, do you stay up nights worrying about an asteroid strike? Periodically a large one gets within the moon's orbit. Sooner or later there will be an extinction level asteroid strike, and one may creep up on us without detection. Scary shit aint it?
Science and engineering as well lives with uncertainty. Something about the best laid plans of mice and men. When therhe Brookhaven RHIC collider went on line there was a theory that the event could cause an event that ended up destroying the Earth. When the first atom bomb was detonated there was a theory the atmosphere oxygen could end up starting a global conflagration.
As a general rule something becomes a law in science after it has been used so much that we rely on it without worrying about it. There are no absolute truths. A good example was the overturning of Newtonian time with Eistien's space-time where time is variable. Which by the way has been demonstrated.
Science only addresses what is observable, testable, and extrapolated based on experiment.
Can the solar system move into a region of space where our science does not apply? There were a few Star Trek stories on that theme. We call that idea science fiction.
What makes you think that when you hit the brakes in your car that it will suddenly stop working? Other than a mechanical failure. Or the jet you are on will suddenly stop flying because aerodynamic science no longer wrks?
Science bashers always ignore their own faith in science when they have no clue about science at all.
The answer to your question is we do not know, and we are comfortable with that. If you are always questioning reality in terms of stability you are going to end up with high blood pressure.
What would really be cool if we found a huge ape that ended up climbing the Empire State Building. Or found huge ants mutated in the desert from old atomic tests. My favorite scifi movie when I was a kid,.
What if are being observed by aliens?
What terrifies me is our screwball president and what kind of war he may get us into....
What religion has always provided is a sense of security and absolutes in our chaotic existence. That is what relgion is for. It is on the believer to reconcile faith with observable and testable science.
A Jewish philosopher and rabbi wrote 4 or 5 centuries ago in A Guide For The Perplexed is that when science and interpretation of scripture conflict, interpretation must change. MOses Maimonides.