Yes, in the sense that I don't think we'll ever be able to fully take control of the natural order of things -- the universe itself is a much larger process than ourselves. I believe we can come to an understanding of it, I just don't think we'll ever actually wield.
FUCK NO to the idea of a sapient being having been responsible and continuing monitoring over our lives with what seems to be the same pitfalls and traps of our own petty emotional trappings, though. I do not believe in a god that we reflect or that reflects us and our qualities as a species.
I know that sounds like I'm a rationalist and that I attribute rationality to the highest form of thought, but I want to assure readers that isn't quite true. I think we need to have our emotions to guide us in our every day lives as they ground us to reality in ways that stark rationality can't -- I think stark, bleak, emotionless rationality probably makes us more destructive and unable to manage our own existence. Emotion determines moralism, and I still have a strong belief in moralism, even if its not figureheaded or guided by the notion of god. But I refuse to believe that some sapient, omnipotent god was responsible for something as vast and complicated as the universe. I think if you were a living being responsible for such a thing, your scope of mind would have to extend far beyond the reaches of our comprehension, and I think the idea of god is just a reflection of our scope of comprehension and not a tangible or even admissible being within our reality. The way god is typically figured is basically just us with a control over natural forces that we hadn't quite been able to define or identify at the time the idea of those gods was introduced, in an attempt to fantasize ourselves as being the most pivotal "creation" in existence. I think as we have a more comprehensive idea of the universe and the workings of nature, god is no longer a feasible explanation for its vastness -- it's simply a means of trying to apply a relevancy to our existence as more important than it actually is.