The consequences of me being wrong are trivial compared to the consequences of you being wrong.
Oh dear - the old Pascal's wager non-sense again.
There are literally thousands of gods that have been purported to exist by humans throughout history. And no doubt people 'believed' in the existence of those gods just as fervently as you do in yours.
The existence of many of those gods are mutually exclusive - the most obvious notion being that if there can only be one god (monotheism) then the others cannot exist. Many of those gods are purported to be vengeful in various ways - randomly vengeful, vengeful against those that do not believe, vengeful agains those that believe in another god (false gods etc, etc).
So the wager is much more complicated that a binary believe in christian god vs do not believe in a christian god. So you takes you pick based on your beliefs, but in a Pascal's wager sense AB, you are in just as bad a position as I am, because while if your god is real then I may be in trouble, if there is a non-christian god whose main gripe is the worship of false gods then you are in trouble and I'm not.
But frankly this is nonsense, not least due to the fact that you cannot just make yourself believe in something that you do not believe, and surely any god worth its name would be able to tell the difference between real belief and pretend belief. So overall you have to trust your own belief or lack of belief and be comfortable with that belief/lack of belief. I'm perfectly comfortable with my lack of belief as I've never seen any credible evidence to change that view. You on the other hand rely on belief, and if you actually had evidence, you wouldn't need belief or faith would you now.