That's quite funny.
I read a spiel from a Sufi somewhere ages ago saying that the first line of the koran should be translated, "there is no God, there is only the one."
yeah and we're all one on e.
But that's just me messing about. Actually, I did pull up a couple of links that I think are kind of relevant to what psychology has to say about God
This one,
http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1465665&displaytype=printable
Gives a good overview,
and this one,
http://www.psypress.co.uk/pip/resources/slp/topic.asp?chapter=ch06&topic=ch06-sc-01 is about much the same thing
It will probably not be obvious how this has anything to do with psychology saying anything about God.
But briefly, my take on it is that more recent findings in the study of attention, in particular the approach pioneered by Alan Allport, have shown that there is a great deal more going on, both -out there- and within the brain than we are aware of. Essentially the argument is that we attenuate stimuli that aren't relevant to the task in hand, and filter them out of awareness, even though it is possible to show that the stimuli have been processed to quite a deep level, even to a semantic level of understanding.
One interpretation of the effect of psychedelics is that they switch off the inhibitors that operate normally, leaving the person overwhelmed by a flood of sensory signals, and suddenly realising, how much more is going on than they ever previously noticed, and how much more conscious it's possible to be, and incidentally, often quite awed, and incapable of doing anything, (the reason we filter out in normal life, is to make us more efficient, better at surviving.)
it's arguable that there is a whole bunch of "spiritual stuff" going on, but that is it doesn't have much survival value, we don't become aware of it, because we teach our children that signals of that sort aren't relevant, and they end up filtering them out and forgetting about them.
But the point is it suggests that our mode of consciousness is quite limited, and possibly culturally determined, and may well not be a very good guide to what is *really* going on.