You can't disprove unfalsifiable claims, that is why religion continues to get away with it. Everything they say cannot be proved wrong. It also cannot be proved right, nor examined in any way at all. When they do make a non-trivial religious claim that can be tested, like "prayer works", then it has always failed to the best of my knowledge. This is because religion relies heavily on the placebo effect and confirmation bias.
All religions do the same thing. They hide behind a wall of "you can't prove me wrong". Whether or not anyone can prove it wrong has no effect on whether it actually
is wrong. This is the classic argument from ignorance fallacy. I can claim I have a metaphysical dragon in my garage. No one can prove me wrong. Is it reasonable for anyone else to believe this is true, because it can't be prove wrong?
http://robvalue.wix.com/atheism#!argumen...lity/c1831
The more sensible way to approach things is to only believe things that have good evidence to back them up. Otherwise, to be consistent, you'd have to accept as possibly true any crazy untestable thing anyone ever says. Would you do that?
The question comes down to what is most important to you: what is comfortable, or what is true?
What do you think keeps bringing you back to religion? It doesn't offer anything real that can't be achieved without religion, but depending on where you live everything may be set up in religion's favour. The social aspect is a big thing. This can be replaced, it's just a matter of finding like minded individuals: ones who want to be your friend without the requirement to also share their delusions.
There are many benefits to leaving religion:
1) Freedom from dogma
2) Not being judged by an invisible being
3) You can make your own moral decisions free from religious pressure
4) You can choose your own purpose to life
5) This life becomes more precious because you realize it's probably the only one we will have
6) You will be able to make the best life decisions, because you are more in tune with reality
7) Intellectual honesty; no need to try and defend baseless claims, you can accept that we just don't know everything
8) You can still believe in a non-interacting, deistic god, should you want to, at least to fill the gap while making the transition (if there is a god, the chances of it just happening to be exactly as described in a story book are next to nil)
I don't know what religion you've been involved in, but assuming it's Christianity or Islam, why would you want to worship the gods of those religions? In the bible and the Quran it displays very clearly the evil nature of God. If I thought it was a real thing, I'd want nothing to do with it. The only reason I can think of is fear: fear of being punished, or of losing rewards. But of course these punishments and rewards are just made up, the carrot and stick to keep people in line because there are no rational arguments to use.
I'd advise reading your holy book, from start to finish. It's the quickest way to make an atheist!