Jainism is Atheist?
If you asked the question, then you are requested to tolerate this explanation:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/religion/religions/jainism/beliefs/G-d.shtml{As this link may not be working now, so I had to modify it and put below the contents of this link directly}.
Jainism and the divine
Jains do not believe in a G-d or gods in the way that many other religions do, but they do believe in divine (or at least perfect) beings who are worthy of devotion.
This makes it difficult to give a straight answer to the question "is Jainism atheistic?" The scholar Heinrich Zimmer suggested that a new word was needed: transtheistic, meaning "inaccessible by arguments as to whether or not a G-d exists".
G-d and the problem of evil
The Jain view of G-d enables Jainism to explain the evil and suffering that exists in the world without the intellectual difficulties faced by religions that have an omnipotent, wholly good, creator G-d at their heart.
Where religions such as Christianity find the problem of evil one of their toughest tests, Jains use the existence of evil as a reason for denying the existence of an omnipotent, wholly good, Creator.
Jainism and G-d - the theistic side
Some writers regard the jinas as 'gods' because the jinas are venerated by Jains in the way that other faiths worship gods or G-d.
Jains venerate them because they have achieved perfection, and have become liberated from the cycle of birth and death.
The jinas are the ideal state of an individual soul's existence, and are worshipped as a perfect example for Jains to aspire to. So the only 'gods' that exist for Jains are pure souls that are omniscient, perfectly happy and eternal.
All of us could become such a 'G-d' because every being has the potential to become such a perfect soul.
In many ways the Jain attitude to perfect beings is both intelligible and satisfying, and sufficient to demolish the claim that Jainism is an atheistic religion. If one wants to argue that Jainism is atheistic then one must do so from a specific, limited, idea of what it means to be divine.
Prayers
Jain prayers aren't like the G-d-focussed prayers found in Christianity. Instead Jain prayers tend to recall the great qualities of the tirthankaras and remind the individual of various teachings.
Jainism and G-d - the atheistic side
Jains do not believe that the universe was created by G-d or by any other creative spirit. Jain writings are scornful of the very idea:
If G-d created the world, where was he before creation? If you say he was transcendent then, and needed no support, where is he now?
No single being had the skill to make this world -- For how can an immaterial G-d create that which is material?
If G-d is ever perfect and complete, how could the will to create have arisen in him? If, on the other hand, he is not perfect, he could no more create the universe than a potter could.
There is no G-d to maintain the universe
Jains do not believe that any form of G-d is necessary to keep the universe in existence, or that any form of G-d has any power over the universe.
There is no G-d of judgement
Jains do not believe in that sort of judgement. Jains believe that the goodness or quality of a being's life are determined by karma.
Jains believe that karma is a physical process, and nothing to do with spiritual beings.
There is no G-d the ruler
Jains do not believe that there is a G-d who must be obeyed.
There is no G-d who helps people
Jains do not believe in any G-d who will respond to prayer or intervene in the world. The beings that Jains worship have no interest in human beings.
The beings that Jains worship are beyond human contact and they cannot intervene in the world.
There is no G-d who demands worship
The perfect beings that Jains worship have no interest in human beings.
Any being that desired anything would not be perfect and thus not a G-d.
There is no G-d compared to whom each of us will always be inferior
Every soul has the potential to become perfect. All perfect souls are equal.
The heavenly beings are not gods
The beings that live in the heavenly kingdoms are not gods since they are still subject to karma and reincarnation. These beings are called devas.