It is my view on the topic, the improbability that something complex as life can spontaneously pop into existence. But I'm listening, even though I might disagree with you...officer.
Life spontaneously popping into existence is religion.
Biology hypothesizes life as developing incrementally, from simple molecular compounds to proto-life assemblages. At what point you'd call an assembly "alive" is arbitrary. Proto-life is a spectrum.
Okay... I will play. Are we missing some component of life that prevents us from repeating the process? A protocell?
Not following. Are you asking why abiogenesis can't occur today?
I enjoy all the good things science has brought to my table, but it is not my religion. Granted, religions of this world have done some harm in their path, but I award science with the worst possible evil on this planet, 3000+ nuclear warheads sitting on rockets waiting for the order to destroy millions of worlds. If you find my blasphemy disturbing, so be it. Science is nothing more than a tool for good or evil, imo.
Science is hardly a religion. It's just the research method that provides the most reliable understanding of how things work.
Misuse of knowledge isn't science. It could be politics, or ambition, or greed; but don't blame application on knowledge.
How did I misrepresent your conclusions? Science dictates that life appeared from the elements of Earth. The analogy is correct as far as I'm concerned.
And what does religion propose?
Complex life forms popping into existence, from dust, by no discernible mechanism -- ie: magic, -- is a lot more incredible than abiogenesis by the familiar, known, observable processes of chemistry.