I guess we're done with the OP, so continuing on to other fun is... might as well? I'unno. Something like that.
Well, let me play devil's advocate here. A very common thing protestants like to say is that if you honestly pray to Jesus with an open heart, he'll hear and answer you.
That's a verifiable claim.
Have you ever tested it? Has the "typical atheist" ever tested it? Or have they simply dismissed it as something not worth testing because their beliefs are set and therefore don't require vetting, just like the person who doesn't bother going on an archeological dig because their beliefs in dinosaurs is set?
At least from what I've experienced, testing it -- repeatedly, over and over and
over -- is exactly what
leads to a lot of "typical atheists", especially those that are raised in a religious household. They pray honestly, and worship fervently, and hold open hearts as wide as the clear blue sky and get zilch. Years upon years of no supporting evidence tends to eventually lead to abandonment of the proposition.
... meanwhile, you occasionally get archaeological digs in high school and whatnot, that trivially and generally repeatedly produce returns. I've actually got a giant sloth tooth hanging around somewhere or another that's many millennium old (tested with me involved in the process and everything), heh, and we spent a bit in a field trip or two digging up extinct fish imprinted rocks and junk. Neat stuff. Something you can actually whack someone with.
Beyond that, as grak alludes to, it's not actually a verifiable claim. It
looks like one, but what counts as praying honestly or with an open heart has no quantifiable or measurable benchmark, which is where the prayer claim fails on verifiability. You can't actually check to see if the experiment was performed correctly, and you have no consistent control group. Fossil dig, you can set your benchmark -- geological strata, geographic region, etc. Physical, quantifiable, ones. -- and test it. You've also got consistent measures and methodology that are pretty much guaranteed to produce results, given sufficient effort, where "sufficient effort" actually has a number (depth, area covered, number of digs, etc.) that can be assigned to it and checked against. Honesty, open heart... the best we could do with that is maybe brain scans or somethin', and while I do believe we've tried stuff like that before, I don't recall it giving any results that back up the claim in question. And people have spent literally decades of their lives trying pretty much everything to get return from prayer and got either nothing or nothing distinguishable from nothing.
... that said, yeah, I'm one of the ones that would agree that faith is a pretty big deal. It's just that there is a substantial difference between belief in propositions that are verifiable (in a communicable and consistent way) and those that, well. Aren't. And a great deal of spiritual propositions are unverifiable at best, incommunicable and/or inconsistent at worst, assuming they're not just outright false.