Well, you already knew this about me and called me out on it not too long ago.
I'm the "Agnostic who believes in God."
And to answer Omnizoa's question (...I still don't know how to multi-quote different posters)...
How topical.
What prompted you to shift toward agnosticism?
It's a long story.
First is a long study of comparative religions that began when I was a teenager. I find the more you learn about many religions, the less probable any one of them seems as to their being an absolute, objective truth.
They also all seem to become equally as far-fetched as those things we call "mythology" the more you learn about them.
But the most revealing thing about comparative religion is the psychology of the "believers." They may not have beliefs in common, but they certainly have many of the same emotion-driven behaviors, obsessions, biases, and thought processes in common.
Listening to zealots from different religions all claiming everyone else is wrong, and having them make their case as to why everyone else is wrong (and will somehow have to pay for their untrue beliefs) is a great way to discover that believers in a bunch of completely different religious dogmas (none of which can be backed up by any evidence) can't all be right...
So maybe none of them are right... or maybe some of them are only partially right, etc.
In addition - personal experiences where my faith (when I was one of those "believers") let me down: I followed the instructions, but did not get the promised results. And my growing discomfort with certain tenets or practices from my previous religion caused me to question further.
Then there's my interest in science. In no way do I claim that science & religion are mutually exclusive or cannot compliment each other, but I do find that science continually answers a lot of questions that only religion could in the past, and the answers are not what we thought.