Is is about the truth, though. How it became into being is very important.
		
		
	 
In and of itself, certainly, but again, 
with regards to the topic, it's irrelevant. We're discussing ethics and morality, the ability to say "don't kill" without reference to the Bible. Whether the universe formed by natural, unintelligent processes, or was created by God, or whatever, doesn't affect this.
	
		
	
	
		
		
			Where did a big bang happen though?
		
		
	 
The Big Bang isn't something that happens at any one point, it's a phenomenon that the entire universe is undergoing. Every point in space is moving away from every other point. It's like asking what happened before the beginning of time, or what's north of the north pole, or who's the bachelor's wife, or what colour an invisible unicorn is - the very nature of the question renders it moot. It's not the easiest concept to get your head around, for sure, but it's robust.
	
		
	
	
		
		
			You have to admit, whether openly or inwardly, that that is a very important part of the equation, for without it, a summary cannot be announced, only a theory.
		
		
	 
I'm not sure what you mean. A theory is the highest echelon of certainty possible by science - atoms and galaxies are theoretical, after all. Be careful you don't fall into the, "But it's 
just a theory!" fallacy.
Anyway, as I said, the question ("Where did the Big Bang happen?") is rendered moot by its very nature. The Big Bang 
didn't happen anywhere, inasmuch as we can't point to any one point and say "that's where it began" - the Big Bang describes the expansion (the 
ongoing expansion) of the entire universe. There's no point where it began, there's nothing it's expanding into, etc - it's not that these questions aren't important, it's that the theory nips them in the bud.
	
		
	
	
		
		
			The Holy Bible is giving a starting point, and none has been able to prove it wrong, and never will.
		
		
	 
If you believe in Genesis is a literal, historical account, then we very much 
can prove it wrong. But there are many interpretations of the various texts and claims of the Bible, so I cannot comment on whether your beliefs have been disproven or not until you expound them.
	
		
	
	
		
		
			Because God is the Creator.
		
		
	 
Do you have any evidence to support this assertion?
	
		
	
	
Perhaps, but he's woefully lacking in his ability to show it. Suffering, tragedy, death, all have befallen me and my loved ones - had I the means, I wouldn't sit in the shadows and watch those I love "very much" live in torment. Free will or no free will, suffering is never justified, except 
possibly to diminish further suffering.
	
		
	
	
		
		
			It is like saying, you carved a statue of a  person, it is your choice to keep it or destroy it. The Creator of a  thing has the right to do anything with his/her creation, always.
		
		
	 
I cannot disagree more strongly; this view leads to the very wicked idea that a parent can do 
anything to his child, including rape and murder. The creator of a thing does 
not have the right to do anything he wants with it, as the thing itself may have rights which overrule those of the creator's wishes.
Suppose God did indeed create us. Why does that give him the right to say, "Stone gays", and be justified in damning us to Hell if we disagree?
 
	
		
	
	
		
		
			Jesus teachings make it very clear that, "vengeance belongs to God, God will repay", and mankind is not to kill.
 
 Note: Im not infereing to abortion. Life is a gift from God and abortion is murder.
		
		
	 
I disagree. Besides the theological implications that, if life is a gift from God, then spontaneous miscarriages and life-threatening pregnancies and births are the direct and foreseen fault of God, I don't consider a blastocyte to be a person.
	
	
	
		
		
		
			
		
		
	
	
	
		
	
	
		
		
			The Qu'ran still promotes lobbing heads off of  infidels.
		
		
	 
And the Bible still promotes stoning gay people to death. Context is everything, my friend.
	
		
	
	
		
		
			Jesus teaches, instead of going to law, one with another, to  rather take wrong and be a sheep for the slaughter. Love always and be  at peace with one another, with ones full exent. Murdering is not a  Christian way.
		
		
	 
Which is all lovely, except it jars with what the Bible said. I again refer you to Leviticus 20:13, wherein gay men are condemned to death by stoning. A brutal and violent end to the 'crime' of being in love.
	
		
	
	
		
		
			Christ, before being hung on the cross, could have called  many angels to destroy each of those that attempted to harm Him, yet,  beacuse He loved all humanity, He chose rather to suffer the pain and  abuse in order to give all humans a chance to know The Father, God and  His beauty and love that He has for each of us.
		
		
	 
Personally, I'd prefer he spend his time helping the suffering. I cannot see the virtue in Jesus coming to Earth, suffering and dying and coming back to life three days later. I 
can see the virtue in Jesus clapping his hands and wiping out all famine and disease across the world forever and ever.
	
		
	
	
		
		
			He is still alive and  welcoming today. He desires to love each and every one, if they will  come to Him.
		
		
	 
And if we don't? The hidden caveat is, of course, that we go to Hell if we don't choose to love him. To me, that's a gun to my head.