Some Schmo wrote:
I wouldn't call that faith. It sounds more like trust to me (in the way that trust is different from faith). You trusted the people that told you that you'd make more money and the general evidence. No faith was required.
Wow, what a grandious statement! But I must inform you that I have never been moved by what people call faith to get out of bed in the morning. My desire to make money to feed my family is what does it for me. And trust me; feeding my family matters to me.
Again, what you're calling faith here I call trust. You trust your dentist and your parents that what they tell you is true, and as you practice their advice, you get a personal knowledge that it was right. Once again, no faith needed.
This assumes you think there's some utility in the myth of the atonement, but there's no way you'll ever be able to prove that the myth is real. All you'll ever be able to do is keep telling yourself that it has value until one day, you've completely convinced yourself, without any proof at all, that it has some value.
In order:
1. Trust in God and faith in Christ are very similar. Trust is a prereq for real faith and in many cases the terms are synonomous. When many people say they have faith in God much of the meaning is that they trust them. I trusted those people and had faith enough in their advice to follow through.
2. Would you get out of bed in the morning if you didn't believe that doing so would help feed your family? You have faith that getting up will in fact help your family and all the evidence so far suggests it does. Are you absolutely sure that while getting up today you won't lose all feeling in your legs while getting up, slam into the dresser, smash your nose into your brain, and instantly die? No, but you have faith enough to try anyways. I'm not meaning to be grandoise, I'm meaning to be practical.
3. Again, faith and trust are similar.
4. Or, you can try to use the atonement and see if it works. If it works once you figure it might be a fluke. You keep trying and see what happens. As the evidence grows your faith grows and you begin to understand more of the cause and effect relationship of it. Eventually it becomes a law you rely on like the sun coming up in the morning and you treat it accordingly. Eventually if you use it enough you come to such an understanding.
You're equating faith with belief, I equate it with experience. Many LDS have a passive acceptance of doctrine but do little or nothing to experience the rewards of faith because they don't seek any by relentlessly testing the Laws and Doctrines of God through actual use. Jesus said that if someone does his will they will know of whether the doctrine is true or not.