Heres a scale of faith Dawkins created, I think it will help your thread OP
1. Strong theist. 100% probability of God. In the words of C.G. Jung: "I do not believe, I know."
2. De facto theist. Very high probability but short of 100%. "I don't know for certain, but I strongly believe in God and live my life on the assumption that he is there."
3. Leaning towards theism. Higher than 50% but not very high. "I am very uncertain, but I am inclined to believe in God."
4. Completely impartial. Exactly 50%. "God's existence and non-existence are exactly equiprobable."
5. Leaning towards atheism. Lower than 50% but not very low. "I do not know whether God exists but I'm inclined to be skeptical."
6. De facto atheist. Very low probability, but short of zero. "I don't know for certain but I think God is very improbable, and I live my life on the assumption that he is not there."
7. Strong atheist. "I know there is no God, with the same conviction as Jung knows there is one."
I think both stance 1 and 7 is completely irrational
I prefer to take each god claim as a separate issue.
I am a 7 in respect to the old gods, zeus/odin, loki, thor, athena, et al. I believe there is zero chance any of them exist.
I am a 7 in respect to any specific western god claim I have heard. This list includes God (with a big G to steal that name too), Allah, Yahweh/Jehovah/יהוה, Elohim/אֱלֹהִים, et al. These gods are all self-contradictory if you read their books. There is
The Problem of Evil, and many other issues that western religions have no good answer for.
I am a 7 in respect to the specific Hindu gods if taken literally, though I don't know if Hindu's view Shiva etc, as literal or metaphor for human behavior. I suppose if it is a metaphor, then it isn't really a god, so no point giving a metaphor a rating.
The only description of a god that makes any sense to me is the generic eastern belief common to Hinduism, Buddhism, etc. Basically, god splits into zillions of pieces which is the substance that everything in the universe is made from. Each and everything in the universe is a little piece of god exploring the rest of the universe. There is no real point to it other than eternity is boring without something to do.
I'd actually give this a 3 on the Dawkins scale. It certainly makes more sense than any other explanation I've heard