I no longer have a religion. Although when I was asked for my religion at the reception of a Catholic hospital, I told them "Jedi"
I figured if I needed a religion in oder to receive medical treatment, I might as well pick a fun one.
I've grown up as a New Apostolic Christian btw. They were a bit of a fundamentalist sect back then, and members were supposed to separate themselves from all "worldly influences". For me, that meant growing up without a TV, and as a result without any normal, mainstream role models that aided other kids in their development and might have helped me to hone my social skills. I also wasn't allowed to read comic books or go to the movies, and my parents had a look at every book that I brought home from the library before I was allowed to read it.
This made things a lot more difficult for me than they already were for a young aspie. At school, everyone picked on me for being a "Jesus freak". I had no idea what other kids talked about when they discussed movies like Star Wars or their favorite TV shows, which only added to my social isolation. To make things worse, New Apostolics believed that both non-religious people and Christians of other denominations were misguided by Satan and that social contact with them should be kept to a minimum, lest us true believers would be pulled over to the dark side
On top of that, it was an apocalyptic religion. New Apostolics believed that Jesus would return within their lifetime and give the start signal for World War III. I remember that when I played outside as a kid and heard a fighter jet overhead, I always thought "oh no, now they're going to drop the bombs. The rapture has probably already happened and you've been left behind". I'll never understand what drives people to instill such irrational fears in a child. I also remember that as a teenager, I had to go from door to door with older members of the church community and bother unsuspecting people with pamphlets and requests for a chat about religion
It was horribly awkward for me, and I was deadly afraid that one of my classmates might open the door.
I managed to deconvert at age 16, much to the chagrin of my hyper-religious family. (One of the reasons that I no longer want any contact with them is that they were trying to proselytize me at every opportunity, especially when I was temporarily unable to leave my apartment and needed their assistance. I guess they figured a completely broken person would be more weak-willed and receptive. They probably thought that my health condition was the result of me turning my back on their god).
Anyway, I had enough religion as a kid to last for a lifetime. Nothing against moderate religion; if it gives people inner peace and provides them with a social community, who am I to say that's a bad thing. But I think that religious fundamentalism is something that no child should ever be subjected to. Especially not children on the autism spectrum who already have enough problems to fit into mainstream society.