Ok first off buddy, lay off the caffeine. Your train of thought is traveling so fast it overshot the station. :-)
The question of the existence of a god or gods is an old one. People have offered up lots of "proofs" over the ages, 100% of it either logically flawed (in the case of proofs of reason) or of dubious/shoddy/unverifiable/exceptionally poor quality (in the case of physical evidence). Not only is there no evidence for the xtian god, there is no evidence for *any* religion's god or gods. There is no evidence that there is only one god like the monotheists claim, or many gods like the polytheists claim.
There are literally thousands of gods that humans now or in the past have fervently believed in and sincerely believed to be real. (Check out godchecker.com for a good listing.) And yet most believers will say, "Well of course *those other* gods aren't real, but mine is." But whether they worship Allah or Yahweh, those gods are on exactly equal footing with Zeus, Mithra, Osiris and Cocopele.
I am an atheist. What my xtian friends & relatives don't understand is that they are atheists too. The only difference is that I believe in one fewer god than they do. To me their god is no different than all the rest, and like all the other gods appears to have no existence whatsoever outside of the human imagination.
P.S. to Amanda and Luis: people once thought that lightning was spears thrown by Zeus and that famines and pestilences were punishments sent from the gods. If you'd care to read up on the latest in cosmology, you'd find that the creation of the universe too has a perfectly natural explanation. If you have at least a full high school education I'd recommend "A Universe from Nothing: Why There Is Something Rather than Nothing" by Lawrence Krauss. The universe is a natural phenomenon just like rainbows. You can choose to believe that god creates rainbows, or you can accept that they are a phenomenon caused by light diffracting through raindrops. Accepting the science, reason and evidence behind rainbows doesn't make them any less beautiful or amazing, nor should the universe be any less wondrous because of its natural origins.