How do you view God? As a literal metaphysical being in the sky? As a state of being? As a force that transcends all? Not literally real, but a symbol that points to something beyond what we can comprehend?
Is there any evidence for God? Scientific, anecdotal, philosophical or otherwise?
I think that the possibility of God is great, considering how organized and precise the universe is; but I wouldn't go so far as to say that I believe in God.
I find it difficult to describe God in an objective manner with any certitude. About the most I would say with certainty is that all things that begin to exist have an ultimate cause and I label that cause God. Beyond that my most minimal definition of God would be what I experience internally as God. So I endeavor to describe God from the point of view of personal experience rather than as objective fact.
The following is a little something I wrote to atheists on the subject of God's existence that exemplifies what I am saying...
Let's start with why you are an atheist. It is because you know of no convincing evidence that supports belief in any deity, right? (I will assume you will answer yes as that is what most atheists say)
And you are right! IF what you are looking for is external evidence of an externally existing deity. I mean one can make arguments like the Kalam of the need for a first uncaused cause but even if one will admit to their merit that is a far cry from establishing the existence of any personal deity that interacts with humans. So let's not even go that route.
This idea of God--as an objectively existing external being "out there" somewhere--is where the whole problem starts. Because it can't be evidenced. When we look out into the world we don't see God performing all the miraculous things he is reported to have done in the Bible. Sure there are reports of occasional miracles here and there but nothing that can be scientifically verified. In fact there is not a shred of evidence to support that God ever performed these miraculous feat in the past (I do actually think there is good reason to accept that he did at least one but let's set that aside). And even if God were doing those things would it really prove he exists? Could we absolutely rule out that there might not be some other cause? When this has been discussed before some atheists said that something like rearranging the stars in the heavens to read "I love you" might convince them. But would even something as dramatic as that convince everyone?
So what does that leave us? Only the evidence of internal subjective experience. And of course the atheist response to that is that such is unreliable and it's "all in people's heads". And once again they are absolutely right! It IS all in people's heads because that is the definition of an internal subjective experience!
BUT does that mean those experiences are not real? Of course not! Even a hallucination is a real experience. It just has no external objective reality. So an internal subjective spiritual experience can't be used to verify an eternal, objectively existing deity either. But the good news is THAT DOESN'T MATTER. Because what really matters is that the experience can be experienced and the effects of that experience can have tangible measurable effects!
Am I saying that God does not exist in any external, objective sense? Of course not, I believe he does. But even if he didn't it doesn't really matter. What matters is that God exists in an internal, subjective way. Even if that were the only way God existed it is enough. And in this world it is all we really ever have. That doesn't make God any less real at all. Quite to the contrary. I know that God exists in this way beyond a shadow of a doubt. It is a fact. There is simply no argument that can refute this fact. It's not even a matter of faith but a matter of knowledge.
You don't have to believe in God. You don't have to muster up faith in him. You don't have to go looking for some evidence to try to establish his external objective existence. All you have to do is experience him. Because the experience of God IS God.