I believe in G-d.
I believe that G-d created the world, but I have seen no evidence that points to the job being done in six days, which means that I will have to work with other, more practical theories about what happened. Even if the world was created in these six days, the world would still look the same and the knowledge of the method of the creation wouldn't help anybody. The process could neither be repeated nor the knowledge of it used to work with the world as we see it.
Evolution is not a question of belief, the knowledge about it is a result of what we have seen, of what G-d, existed He, wanted us to see and work with, assuming this is our world to play with. Anybody who rejects evolution based on his belief has not understood the difference between belief and fact, and anybody who rejects evolution because "science has proven it wrong" has not understood the very idea of checking the facts first, which is a lot worse than reading a holy book and seeing that it doesn't mention evolution. (And why would it, presumably G-d had better things to do than to burden humanity with complicated science at that point in time.) Holy books are a good thing, if you know how to use them. They are not a replacement for science.
As for the difference between belief and fact, I know a "belief" is a statement that G-d might want us to believe or not, maybe to test us, while a fact is what G-d has given us knowledge about for free, via the world we live in. Believing in certain statements doesn't make the facts wrong, unless we want to go ahead and claim that G-d lied to us when he made the world and the information contained within it. Assuming that both the book and the world are creations of G-d, how can the information in the one possibly mean that the other is wrong? Wouldn't it rather be that both say the same thing and we have not yet learned how they do? In such cases, I have found, it is most often the written word that was misunderstood rather than the evidence we see around us wrong.
Did Moses part the Red Sea? How should I know? It is told, and the story does its job by defining the Jewish people. Thus Moses has done his job whether he existed or not.
Was the world created in six days? If it was, it has certainly been made to look like it wasn't. Is this a test for us? If it is, it is certainly a very easy test. All we have to do is learn nothing and ignore evidence and we pass. I do assume that if G-d wants to test us He can come up with rather more difficult demands (He did too).
Was there a Noah and an ark? Presumably there was, somewhere, possibly where the book says it happened. When, I do not know.
Is there a G-d? I believe there is. But G-d is not kidding with us when we find evidence for evolution and He is not specifically out to reward those among us too ignorant to understand the world and too arrogant to learn about it. The worst that can be said about G-d, I think, is that He expects us to live in this world without relying on his constant help and interference. And I think we should. And it turns out that those of us who attempt to do that have greater command over nature than those who rely on G-d to do their work for them. He is not our servant and should not be treated as such, not even by religious types.
Is there a heaven? There is hope. Without hope, life is a lot more difficult. "Heaven" is not a physical place, but it clearly does exist as hope.
Do miracles happen? They do indeed and every day too. But most miracles are less spectacular than the classic miracle (but usually a lot more helpful). Every day is a miracle. Who are we to expect more?