Interesting responses. I grew up in a 90%- 95% LDS community. I didn't encounter a variety of Christian beliefs until my mission to Southern California, and I was moved by the sincerity of the various beliefs I encountered. I recognized that these beliefs were very important to people, and that many of them were the result of careful study and some kind of reasoning, as well as emotional belief, despite the reality that all of their beliefs, including the LDS had flaws, at least it appeared that way to me.
If there was no God, they could fall back on Pascal's wager, but if there was a loving and powerful God, that God would not relegate any to eternal torment or oblivion. Reflecting on D&C 19 years later, I saw it as both a recognition of the weakness of BOM theology, and the manipulative nature of Joseph Smith and/or Mormon Jesus.
From then on I have been a kind of 50% deist 50% pantheist, who feels that there are some very insightful, Love-inspired teachings in the Bible, as well as some very human-inspired, ideas that have promoted genocide, hypocrisy, racism, slavery, and other destructive actions.
It's interesting to me that dogbite knew a Universalist. Did you ever discuss your beliefs with them?
Ghost's response reminds me that people choose to believe, and they choose a belief that fills a conscious or unconscious need. Probably all or most of us have tried the 'fake it 'till you make it' road, and found it unsatisfactory.
Fluff,s response also reminds me that people choose their God, and often for arbitrary reasons, like choosing to follow their tradition. At least that's what I draw from his response. Is that God my father, you ask? Nope. More an object of longing. But that could change. and I could be wrong.
Thanks for responding.

God is Love. God is Truth. The greatest problem with organized religion is that the organization becomes god, rather than a means of serving God.