Here's my addled input. This will sound muddled because I know it sounds that way to me.
OK.
If I look at the god(s) question from a purely objective, outsider perspective (which may almost be impossible given my brain chemistry and social conditioning), I see no real evidence for the existence of gods. Some may use the cosmological or anthropomorphic arguments and I would say, Yes, they both allow for the possibility of gods. But possibility is not exactly probability. The bottom line is this: I believe that if gods are beings that are infinite and all-powerful, etc., the probability that an entity like me, with limited perceptual abilities, will ever be able to determine the existence of said god is practically zero.
Having said that, I also realize that each human is equipped with a different brain chemistry and that many brains seem to experience a god-concept on a very conceptual level (i.e. mystical experience or "I Just feel god"). Does this mean that these people are perhaps in tune with gods and thus can perceive this while other cannot? Or does it simply mean they have a propensity for abstract, mystical concepts? Do they simply have a brain chemistry that seeks patterns where none exist? Either possibility could exist but which is more probable?
Now, getting down to brass tacks, I have no problem with envisioning a god concept in a metaphorical or allegorical sense (I'm a mythicist of the Joseph Campbell school). In fact, I look at the universe with a sense of wonder and awe that could be termed worshipful. Also, I can experience the vast diversity of human religious experience and find many beneficial, affirming concepts and even feelings of something akin to transcendence while at the same time recognizing that these religious experiences must be perceived in a mythical rather than literal sense. When we get literal about our religions, we tend to increase the amount of suffering in the world (terrorism, crusades, bigotry, intolerance, etc.).
So I guess my experience in the realm of religiosity can't really be pigeon-holed into a survey although I am technically an atheist.