People with religion are, from what I have experienced, generally more happier, feel they have a sense of purpose in life, can find answers to many challenging things and as Anne Deveson suggests, more 'resilient' - able to work through and cope in times of adversity. For these reasons it can be totally understood why people would want a God or Gods to believe in.
What I personally find really interesting is how throughout civilisation people from almost every different background have always questioned where they come from and where they are going. Fair enough. You might even suggest there is a biological homosapien propensity to believe in a higher power.
But there is no God.
The Christian God has been around for only at most 3/4 thousand years? Whilst humans with brain functioning at times equal to those today, have been around for I think 200, 000 years [I'm quoting my dad here...soo hmm], well at least longer than Christianity has been around for. So what does this mean for all these people who were never introduced to the Christian God or any higher power for that matter? Eternal damnation? Burning in hell for never knowing about something which was to be introduced tens of thousands of years n the future? I think thats a bit unfair. A bit unrealistic.
And it always amazes me how religion is passed on. I mean 4/5 of my very close friends are absolute atheists, because their parents are. While 1 of my very close friends is a dedicated Christian, because his parents are. Or more specifically because he was brought up to believe in a Christian God.
More interesting still, is that religion is passed on through language and anyone who has studied poststructuralism will understansd that the slippery, always-changing, multi-layered snake that is language creates an absolute different meaning for every single person...or interpretaton. This suggests that God is different, absolutely, for every single person. They can never share the same understanding of him/her/it because religion is, unfortunately, communicated through language.
But for a person like myself, my first understanding of God is of him as a theory an idea. This understanding holds. I do not believe in a God, and never will. I would like to say I pity people with religion for their ignorance and blindness. However, they seem so much happier and fulfilled in life that I think it is I who should be pitied.