After reading through this thread, I think clubbing is too good for some of the presenters of these inane, childish arguments.
Permit me, please:
(1.) We believe in God because we choose to. Regardless of why we choose to believe, the fact remains that it is a choice. It always has been, it always will be. The "God-shaped hole" has been filled with a broad variety of clutter, including religious prattle from well-meaning sycophants to the damnable poison of the cults. It has also been filled with the search for genuine truth, which is made comprehensible by FACT. Without FACTS, you have NOTHING.
(2.) Life is given meaning by your own choices, and by your own actions. I find it tremendously insulting that there are those who feel that unless I'm being preached at on Sunday, and there every moment the church doors are open, my life lacks meaning.
Big shock, here, kids: My life has NEVER ONCE lacked meaning. I am a father of four, the husband of a wonderful woman, and I'm finally (Hope!) going to be getting into a career that will be wonderous, insipring, challenging, and fulfilling. It has taken me time to reach this point, (and thanks, again, to friends here), but I finally came to the realization that the Church was trivializing what was giving my life meaning. If I am only a good man if I am telling my sons what gives life value, but not demonstrating it, what have I really done? If I tell my wife I love her, but don't show it, it might make God happy, but what have I done for her?
If I am not available to my sons, or to my wife, but instead, commit our resources to the pursuit of a God who has no interest in our lives, (which, I would suspect would invalidate His Deity), then does my life, in fact, have meaning? These are the relationships which in part define who I am, and will live on after me. My connection to these people provides the meaning to my life, and ultimately, reveals what I value.
The Church is right on one point: No one ever laid on their deathbed and said, "I wish I'd spent more time at work." In my case, I won't be saying, "I wish I'd spent more time at church."