I have not and will never propose that the universe came from nothing, or nothingness, or the void, or whatever. That is an absurd concept, with all due respect to the nits who believe in it. I am delighted that you are not one of them.
However, there are certain aspects of the omnipotent God concept which make it logically untenable. For example, if God knows all, then God cannot have a creative thought. That would mean that God is essentially a mindless computer, doing now what He always knew that He was going to do, from the beginning of time— and in process, observing the detailed circumstances of the demise of every ant and the position and momentum of every electron.
Your conclusion does not logically follow. That “God cannot have a creative thought” is highly ambiguous. You have assumed a limited and anthropocentric concept of God and can’t seem to think beyond that, even for the sake of argument.
God does not think as humans do, eg. discursively. Furthermore, his thoughts are not modificatioins of his intellect, as is the case with human beings. God’s “thoughts”, rather, are identical with his essence. God does not think discursively as if he has new thoughts that he did not have before. If God acquired new knowledge, even if it be a creative thought, then he is not omnicient. But since God is omnicient he always possesses the infinite fullness of knowledge. He can neither lose nor gain knowledge as do humans.
Those ideas worked well in medieval times, for people whom, if educated to the level of a modern day 8th grade student, would be seen as geniuses. They do not work for a belief system competing with honest (non-Darwinian) science.
Obviously, you know nothing of the Middle Ages, from whence modern science originated, i.e. the medieval universities with Buridan, etc. and the anticipation of Newton’s laws of motion.
Darwinian science, insofar as it is science does not compete with traditional philosophical and theological doctrines. You have made a category error. It is, rather, for the sake of clarification, Darwinian ideology that competes with traditional philosophy and theology. Darwinian ideology is not science, it is an ideology grafted onto the science, though you might not have the background in Darwinism to distinguish the two. Darwinian science can only compete with other scientific theories.
Furthermore, the newest is not always the greatest. Darwin considered Aristotle to have been the greatest biologist of all time. Apparently, you don’t know much about Darwin either, who said in his
Notebooks, “Linnaeus and Cuvier have been my two gods, though in very different ways, but they were mere schoolboys to old Aristotle.”
God does not need to be omnipotent to create the universe. He only needs to be capable of creating the universe. .
To say God or anything or anyone else only needs to be capable of doing what he or it does is circular and non-informative.
In the mind of someone who has no idea how to create matter from energy (like you and I both) the ability to do so is impressive. I studied physics and tried to figure these things out, and I remain impressed. Then I studied some biology. Cowabunga! Creation is an awesome, mind-bending piece of work.
Creating matter from energy is not creating, it is fashioning or making from what pre-exists, like Plato’s
Demiurgos. Matter and energy are different manifestations of the same thing, so your statement is irrelevant to the idea of true creation.
Whence comes the physical energy?
In sum, your arguments have merely gone in a circle and do not address the problem of the universe and its existence.