So.... are you saying God might exist?
I'm saying that as an agnostic atheist I'm open to the possibility should evidence come along. I think it's almost certain that a god doesn't exist, at least not one characterised by man in any of the various holy texts, but I am merely accepting the null hypothesis for all gods until evidence to support their existence is introduced. I strongly suspect that it never will.
The "multitudes of christians worldwide who accept evolution" do NOT accept atheistic evolution, and there is a HUGE difference. My questions do not even come into play, because Theistic evolution HAS an answer - God started it.
In this case you are demonstrating that you are looking at this problem from entirely the wrong perspective. Science looks at the evidence that exists, and comes to conclusions based on it. This is regardless of faith, it's practically the very definition of how science has to operate.
The evidence shows evolution. The evidence shows a big bang.
What came "before" the big bang is unknown to science. As such, more work is done in the cosmology field to see if we can glean further evidence, and in the quantum physics field for the same reason. Maybe some day we'll find more evidence that clues us in to the nature of reality a bit more.
One thing you can guarantee though is that no decent scientist will ever stop and say "well, I don't know what happened before this, therefore god did it". It's entirely unscientific, illogical and pointless as a claim, because it explains nothing and only leads to the further question of "well, where did god come from", invariably answered by "god is eternal and didn't need creating", which begs the question as to why energy couldn't fulfil the role of eternal necessity, or quantum foam, or something else we haven't yet discovered.
Strangely enough, theistic scientists do pretty much the same thing when researching into that field. They don't ever just conclude that "before" this event, god much have taken direct action.
Those that believe in atheistic evolution are who I am addressing, because THEY have a serious problem.
Only in your weird perspective of science do atheists have a serious problem.
There is no answer to the question.
Some of the questions you've been asking so far might not have an answer yet (while others have been just plain silly, like the conservation of matter one...), but that's not a problem to someone intellectually honest enough to realise that "I don't know yet" is a better answer than "<insert deity of choice> did it, end of story!"
Which is why when the question is asked, they get defensive and start calling people stupid and ignorant and doing the "superior dance".
When the question is asked politely by someone who has done their research, it's generally answered politely. You did neither. You charged on to this forum full of righteous arrogance, proclaimed that evolution was wrong, then abandoned that line when it became clear that you had completely misunderstood the article that you claimed was a problem for evolution, then you shot off on another tangent that you thought would be profitable and made some elementary mistakes there too. It's not so much a "superior dance" as trying to point out that what you think is crippling to atheists isn't, but doing so for the thousandth or more time. After that long it just gets a little trying. You're not the first creationist to come on here claiming to have some proof that evolution or the big bang didn't happen, and you're not even the most successful.
Really, you should learn a lot more about something you intend to debunk before you even try. It will help you out enormously.
It's all a distraction, but it doesnt work with me. I still want to know the answer. How do you explain the original matter/energy?
Call it eternal if you like. Makes more sense than an eternal god arbitrarily being called upon to solve the issues. At least we have proof that matter and energy actually exist.
In all seriousness, the answer is still "we don't know for sure", and that's fine. It's the way science works, always exploring the boundaries of knowledge. If we knew, what would be the point of looking into this issue any more?