I think the appropriate response for a physicist is: 'I do not find the concept of God very interesting, because I cannot test it.'
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
It's hard to say, 'I don't believe in God.' I would love to know if God exists. But it's a very difficult thing for me to believe.
I do not need the idea of God to explain the world I live in.
If God is the mystery of the universe, these mysteries, we're tackling these mysteries one by one. If you're going to stay religious at the end of the conversation, God has to mean more to you than just where science has yet to tread.
You don't have to be peculiar to find God.
It connects with the theologians' point that you can say what God is not, but not (easily) what He is.
My view is that science only has something to say about a very particular notion of God, which goes by the name of 'god of the gaps'.
That deep emotional conviction of the presence of a superior reasoning power, which is revealed in the incomprehensible universe, forms my idea of God.
My thoughts about God are vague and abstract. My connection with the energy of the universe is shaky.
The very impossibility in which I find myself to prove that God is not, discovers to me his existence.
I believe that the question of the existence of God is an impenetrable mystery and beyond human comprehension.