I don't see how we are allowed to require one thing be created while letting another be immune from this requirement. But, for the sake of argument, let's say that the creator exists outside of spacetime and the causal order.
We need to come to a decision whether such an entity or entities can exist or not. Essentially the question is between "In the beginning, God" or "In the beginning, not-God".
Yes, we both have the issue of something coming from nothing. Rather than invoking a supernatural process whereby the universe is spoken into existence (or otherwise magically willed into being), I think it is better to let the investigation continue and to admit at this point we just don't yet know.
I don't have a problem with looking at what science might come up with to explain it. In the meantime I'm satisfied with my statement of belief "God did it", and presumably you're happy with your statement of belief "Science will understand it eventually".
Evolution explains the diversity of life, not its origins. The process of transition from non-living organic matter to life I am sure is a complicated process, but I am also confident it will be explainable at some point as a natural process. But if not, that will still be no reason for me to say well, I guess it must be magic.
I'd make a slight nitpick there and say that evolution seeks to explain the diversity of life
That aside, I agree that evolution seeks to explain how and why there are so many different living things rather than how they came to be living things in the first place. It's just one piece of the jigsaw of trying to explain, in the absence of a deity, how nothing because the universe with the variety of life we see around us (and, presumably, the variety of life that may exist undiscovered elsewhere in the universe).
That's the beauty of science...it leads us to asking questions we previously were too ignorant to even ask. I don't think science will ever answer everything, much in the same way that we will never discover all of mathematics.
Can't deny that one. Although the idea that we'll never discover all of mathematics might strike fear into the heart of a generation of teenagers struggling with their homework