I wonder how many hours scientists have spent mixing chemicals together in the hope that a life form will arise, yet still conclude that this happened by chance billions of years ago.
Some of us conclude based on the miracles in the Bible that God made life miraculously.
Firstly abiogenesis is a different subject from evolution - and if I had a pound for every time I've pointed that out to a creationist, I'd be rich by now.
There is endless evidence that life evolved from a common ancestor on the early Earth about 4 billion years ago. The first replicator subject to natural selection got there, at that time, somehow.
We don't yet know how that happened but that mystery doesn't help a jot with the fairytale creation story with the magic garden and the talking snake, a few thousand years ago. That has simply been falsified by countless different lines of evidence, from geology, physics, astronomy, cosmology, biology, genetics, astrophysics, archaeology - hell, some ice cores are much older than creationist universe is supposed to be.
I'll concede that distant starlight appears to lead to the conclusion that everything is billions of years old, however, this has its own problems because you have to invoke dark matter to account for star and galaxy formation.
Distant star light is just one part of the evidence from one discipline. I really don't know why you think dark matter is a problem.
Also, I don't agree there is evidence for macroevolution.
Then you're just wrong. "Macroevolution" isn't a distinct process - it's just lots of "microevolution".
Again, distant starlight is the only thing I currently see as a contradiction to six day creation.
This is a joke, right? Tell me you're joking...
Yet when I see pictures of supernova SN1987 I think of it in terms of a recent event, even though it can't yet be explained as one.
What are you talking about?