There isn't a God. People created the concept of Gods, then decided another set of Gods made more sense, then decided that there must be one supreme God so they created the concept of monotheism, then they disagreed about what god wants us to wear and eat on Fridays so they all set up separate camps that claimed to know what God wanted. All the while doing exactly what people do with or without Gods, or God or Allah, or Thor or...well, any of the thousands of entities created in the imaginations of man and passed off as an actual being that is in some way involved in our life. We're all human, we all act human. God didn't give us morality any more than he gave me the can of beans in my cupboard. Morality is and has always been exactly what man says it is. And it does exist, even though God doesn't.
I'm not trying to prove there is no God. I know you believe there is one. I do not. I don't believe any amount of reason proves anything as far as faith is concerned so I seldom try to use an argument like "If there really was a God he would have provided us with an absolute moral code, since we don't have one there is no God." If that's what you heard, you read me wrong. First, God has not provided us with an absolute moral code. Man has always established what is right and what is wrong and sometimes they use parts of scripture to justify their distinctions, sometimes they don't. My point is not about the existence or nonexistence of God, but that morality exists with or without a God because morality is man-made and always has been...again, with or without a God.
Jumped in here not to discuss the possible existence of God. You can state your belief however you'd like and I'll continue not being bashful about saying God doesn't actually exist. It seemed you believed there were benefits to faith in and of itself, that the existence of God wasn't necessary for a person to benefit from faith. So I asked, "what if there is no God, should I still have faith for the benefits even if I don't believe?" You brought up Pascals Wager. Well, Pascals wager deals with this from a different angle. He asks "What if God does exist?" If it is at all possible that he does then we want to make sure to keep ourselves out of hell. Only problem is, I can't pretend to believe. If there was even a sliver of me that wondered if God existed I guess I could grab onto that and with the help of a really good imagination, tuning out reality, trying to enter a lucid dream state, etc. maybe I could get that special feeling in my bosom that religious people get (I get it too, but it's usually when I do something naughty, so I've never attributed it to a higher power). Until then, I'm stuck not believing in God. Understand please, I couldn't start believing in God tomorrow anymore than you could start believing in unicorns. I'd still want some reason to believe that any of it was true. As of yet I don't have a single reason, yet I still want to be good. You tell me I'm just trying to be legal? Yet I break a number of laws on any given day and I don't feel the least bit bad about it, but I still desire to be good. Yet you're telling me I can't because I don't believe in whatever ******** someone sold you on.