You wrote: "...so am I to understand that you don't 'as such' believe in an omnipotent being who is originator of 'we'?"
Other than believing things on a mundane level (2+2=4, or "Cec', I'm going to the store. I'll be back in awhile."... or the Sun is the center of our solar system... things, these are things I can easily believe in. I know them.
But we speak of God(s), when we speak of an 'omnipotent Being' or 'the words of God' I am unable to do the strict belief thing. This is due to many levels of consciousness that I have explored and there are levels that transcend our current belief systems.
One cannot truly believe without having experienced what is believed. The experience that makes belief a fact must occur before one believes. Religions ask us and some demand that we believe in God (Allah, Dios, etc) without ever asking us to experience this God. Religions use God as a weapon that will harm us and send the non-believer to the fires of a Hell. Christianity demands of it's followers that Jesus is the Lord God incarnate. Islam demands of it's followers to 'believe' all that it's imams say regarding Mohammed's teachings. In either case it's a do-or-die in misery affair.
I am unable to live my own life according to these principles. I do not believe that Jesus or even Mohammed intended for their words to frighten but rather to enlighten. Fortunately there are a few (amongst millions) that have been enlightened by their words... but not by the religions that have been built in the names of Jesus or Mohammed.
Eastern religions have been around far longer than Christianity and Islam. I, for the most part, appreciate the attitude behind the words. One is not required to be anything other than themselves. It is through this Self that one finds the same enlightenment that Buddha experienced, one finds the same 'Christ' within that Jesus experienced, and one finds the same 'divine experience' that Mohammed found upon a rock.
This level of transcendence, by the very name, is an experience that is possible for all, but is not transcendent until the experience becomes personal.
One must keep in mind when speaking of religions, that Buddha was not a Buddhist, Jesus was not a Christian nor was Mohammed Islamic. The religions conceived in their names are but shadows of the people they purport to speak for... sometimes good, other times they cast an evilness... the duality of yin/yang. But these names I have referred to (and thousands that came both before and after them), became enlightened... the transcension of duality where all becomes One... a level of consciousness that offers liberation from the duality that encompasses our daily lives. This is true bliss. It does not speak, it does not demand, it only gives and asks nothing in return. The experience has no gender, has no form but only what may be called a 'spirit-ness' that brings one closer to godliness.
I would be a fool to ask you to believe these words I have written. It would refute what I had stated earlier about belief. But I will ask that when you feel what we call 'love' do you connect that with a religion? Do you feel like a Christian or Jewish or Islamic when you see beauty? hear beautiful music? read comforting words? Or do you feel a connection to something much larger than your ego?
One should never believe until they know that which they believe personally.
[Enough, eh?

Thx, mousey-one, for the conversation!
Cecil