Yes, I see that, but that's not the point. Let me spell it out.
According to the Theory of Evolution, humans and the great apes have a common ancestor. However, the chromosome count of humans is 46 and that of the great apes is 48. So we make a hypothesis that there has been a fusion of two of the ancestral chromosomes in the human lineage, some time after the divergence of the lineages leading to chimpanzees and humans. When we were able to test that hypothesis, by developing the technology of genome sequencing, we find there is indeed such a fused chromosome in the human lineage: human chromosome 2 is an end to end fusion of two ancestral chromosomes which very closely matches the separate chromosomes 2p and 2q of chimps. The prediction consistent with the Theory of Evolution and the proposition that the great apes and humans share a common ancestor pans out. The fact of the fusion is entirely consistent and supportive of common ancestry. Now, of course you can explain any observation by positing a supernatural event, but such explanations are not just superfluous and lacking in parsimony, but fall outside the remit of science. As Bertrand Russell said: "Whenever possible, substitute constructions out of known entities for inferences to unknown entities."