Why?
Aren't you the guy who refuses to defend his assertions and doesn't care what anybody else believes? Do you think that you deserve more than you are willing to give? You called it casting pearls before swine.
A comment like that serves as a litmus test for scientific illiteracy. As soon as one makes it, he has identified himself as somebody uninterested in science enough to study its basic and fundamental concepts.
And you are way behind in abiogenesis research.
Restricted choice : the idea that if condition X is the case, we might see either A or B occur, but that if condition Y is the case, we will see B. Consider flipping a loaded and a fair coin. In one case, heads and tails both come up. In the other, only (or mostly) one or the other.
In this case, if abiogenesis is possible and occurred, we might see ongoing progress in its investigation, or we might hit an insurmountable dead en, If abiogenesis is impossible, we will hit that dead end. That hasn't happened yet after decades of research. New links are continually added to the forming chain.
Supernaturalism doesn't make any science better. It adds no explanatory or predictive power to any scientific law or theory.
Go ahead and stick religious ideas into any theory of your liking and show how it makes it better.
Soundslike you're looking for the biological equivalent of the rather nebulous biblical category of kind.
So then the dozens or hundreds of species in a biological family don't represent evolution? What magic barrier arises to stop that degree of evolution from proceeding further?
How about saying that macroevolution begins above the category of kingdom rather than family? God created a bacteria, a protist, a fungus, an plant, an animal, Noah carried them onto the ark in a basket and saved them all, and then they evolved. Those were the five kinds.