For those who think that life could not originate spontaneously... I think that a lot can happen when you have millions of years and a whole planet to work with. Sometimes people ask why it isn't happening again. I think that it would be unlikely to, given how short is human history and how much of the biomass is occupied in living organisms.
Another argument is that abiogenesis might only be possible in a prebiotic milieu. Life assembling itself from nonlife may only be possible in the absence of creatures that feed on organic molecules.
If you want to say that a naturalistic answer is the only possible true one, that is your decision.
That's not my position. I'm an agnostic atheist.
Why is this phenomenon so common on these threads? I write repeatedly that I do not rule out supernaturalism, just that I have no reason to invoke it, and this invariably is transformed into comments like yours above. I've coined a phrase for this - disbelief/unbelief conflation, where disbelief means saying that something is false and unbelief is the same as agnosticism - neither belief nor disbelief.
Brian's comment above this one reflects that same tendency. What he is referring to is when he tells me I have ruled out gods and the supernatural and I tell him what I just told you - no, I have not.
Do you have an opinion as to why so many believers do this? Why did you?
In my humble ? opinion, science relies upon magic.
That's exactly wrong. Science seeks order in the universe. If it were satisfied with magic, there would be no need to posit dark matter. Just say that some god or angels is keeping spiral galaxies moving like pinwheels. That was good enough for the Greeks (Apollo pulled the sun through the sky) and the Vikings (Thor makes lightning and thunder), but science removes the magic that the faithful accept from the process.
these self replicating molecules turned up..no evidence of this, is there?
They exist when once they didn't, which is also your reason for saying that a god did it. We expect no more evidence for the naturalistic hypothesis than that it is possible that abiogenesis occurred naturalistically, nor do we need more. We need evidence that it didn't to posit that it didn't.
Spiritual is the realm of God and the Bible.
Disagree. I don't find the Christian approach to life spiritual at all. Believing in and praying to imagined spirits isn't being spiritual. Nor is an ideology that teaches that the earth and beasts are there for us to have dominion over, nor one that teaches that living in nature is inferior to an immaterial existence following death, or that the world is expendable and will be destroyed in a fiery apocalypse.
How do you think that a scientist is going to determine if something shows design or not?
He'd need to identify something that only intelligence could have created. Do you recall the argument from design based in a hypothetical story of a man walking through a heath and stumbling upon a watch? What tipped him off that it was intelligently designed? Assembled, inorganic materials - glass and polished metal. We don't see such things grow from ingredients naturally like the thousands of plants that didn't catch his eye before finding the watch.
That is no more than the presumption that there is no actual 'spiritual' and that it can all be interpreted as physical phenomena.
I don't presume that. I simply have no reason to believe in spirits or supernaturalism, so I live as if they don't exist without saying they don't. That the default position with agnosticism. We must live like those who say yea or those that say no while making neither assertion, and for skeptics, atheism is the default position regarding agnosticism for gods - agnostic atheism.
they are not certain of the absolute truth of their results as they have not tested all other possible scenarios.
Nor need they be. It's sufficient that it is possible.
their tests do not show that all life forms evolved from the one life form without any tweaking of genes by God, as opposed to natural processes.
Nor need they for the same reason.
You have this strange requirement for certain knowledge, but only from science. That's quite rare, seldom available, and not necessary. Most things we do in daily life are decisions based in incomplete knowledge. It's not only rarely possible to do better, it's not necessary. We live life as if our beliefs are correct, some knowing that they might not be.
I detect the undetectable God by faith that He exists and allowing Him to show Himself to me.
You're describing confirmation bias. Once you decided that this god exists, nothing you see will change that.
At least they are conclusions and not just "We don't know" statements as atheists/skeptics give.
This is a problem with faith, not a virtue. Guessing and calling the guesses truth, knowledge, or answers is not a virtue.
It is a faith after all, so objective verifiability is not applicable.
Yes, it's a guess, and evidentiary support for unfalsifiable claims is neither available nor necessary for one to believe them by faith.
There is no purpose for my existence or for the existence of anything without a creator
Even if the universe were created, you might have no purpose to the creator, who might not know you exist or care if it did.
I determined the purpose from faith in the creator and listening to Him.
I determined my own purpose listening to my conscience and reasoning faculty.
The purpose of life for us is to find the creator and to serve the creator and enjoy the creator and thank the creator.
That's not the one I came up with for myself.
It is reasonable to believe in a creator for a start.
Not in the literal sense of the word. There is no sound argument that ends, "Therefore, God." If you hold that opinion, you didn't get there through reason.
Not believing has no use in helping us determine fact from fiction.
I'd say that believing absent sound criteria is the easiest way to believe fictions. The purpose of critical thought is to identify and reject false and unfalsifiable claims so as not to accumulate wrong ideas.