Science is not without errors. What once science "proved" to be true, further scientific research may discover it not to be true.
That fact is often brought up by the "believers," but it is faulty reasoning. Of course science makes errors. No real scientist would say that anything is true beyond question, just because he (or somebody else) said it. No statements are holy and required to be believed. That's the beauty of science.
A scientist deals with a hypothesis, which is a suggestion that something appears to be true, based on the following evidence: A, B, C.
If there is no evidence, his statement is nonsense, and is generally considered pure fiction. And scientific "truths" change all the time, as our science improves and new evidence comes to light.
Here's a silly little example, but it proves the point: At the beginning of the Covid pandemic, many people wore gloves all the time when outside of their home, as they were afraid they could pick up the virus by touching something. I did that myself when going grocery shopping. Then, evidence proven by science came out, that the Covid virus doesn't spread that way, and the gloves are probably unnecessary. That is based on statistical evidence: Do people wearing gloves get Covid less often than people without gloves? No? Then the glove thing is merely a theory, or a guess. It is not a fact, and was not dictated by a deity. (If thou wearest gloves, thou shalt not get Covid.)
The great "blessing" of science is the fact that errors appear all the time, and any reputable scientist announces that the idea is not proven, and not believed to be true any more. Scientific belief requires proof, not some blind adherence called faith. And what is believed to be true, based on the evidence, gets closer to the truth all the time.
Many of the stories in the Bible are great stories, but that is all they are.