The Luke,
tell that to these guys, all great scientists and devout Christians as well:
Nicholas Copernicus, Blaise Pascal, Sir Francis Bacon, Johannes Kepler, Galileo Galilei, Rene Descartes, Sir Isaac Newton, Robert Boyle, Michael Faraday, Gregor Mendel, William Thomson Kelvin, Max Planck, Sir Ronald Aylmer Fisher, Theodosius Dobzhansky, Arthur Peacocke, Russell Stannard, John Polkinghorne and Francis Collins.
I'm not familiar with every name on that list... but I'm familiar enough with some of them to do a little correction:
Nicholas Copernicus... atheist.
Blaise Pascal... atheist.
Sir Francis Bacon... playwright, not a scientist.
Johannes Kepler... atheist.
Galileo Galilei... atheist.
Rene Descartes... atheist.
Sir Isaac Newton... some form of mathematical esotericist, not really properly religious. He spent most of his life working on heretical Kabbalist codes.
Robert Boyle... atheist.
Michael Faraday... atheist.
Gregor Mendel... he wasn't definitely a Christian, he was a monk, might have signed up just for an education... most of his work was considered either heretical or blasphemous.
William Thomson Kelvin... atheist.
Max Planck... absolutely an atheist.
Sir Ronald Aylmer Fisher
Theodosius Dobzhansky
Arthur Peacocke
Russell Stannard
John Polkinghorne
Francis Collins
...not really familiar with the guys lower down this list, I assume most are part of the 0.1% of scientists that are religious (3+% of scientists are manic depressives for example).
With regard to the top of that list, I think you are confusing being born into a religiously oppressive time and actually being religious.
The Luke