It is true that supernatural causes are a subject outside of science, but [b]intelligent versus unintelligent causes is a subject very much within science[/b].
For example, forensic scientists and pathologists regularly determine whether a death was due to natural causes or intelligent causes. If somebody dies of a purported heart failure, and then they do an autopsy on the body and find signs of arsenic poisoning, they say this was not a death by natural causes; it was a poisoning. That is perfectly legitimate as a scientific inquiry. Now, if the intelligent cause turns out to be supernatural, that's a determination that is outside of science, but as you can see, [b]the self-evident fact of the matter is that intelligence is not a determination that's outside of science[/b]. It's in fact the regular business of science, like deciding whether a drawing on a cave wall is a painting by prehistoric cavemen or a product of natural erosion and chemistry on a rock wall.
God, by definition, created everything (Jn. 1:1), including the time dimension that we exist in; however, He isn't affected by time (2 Ptr. 3:8); therefore, He doesn't exist in time; thus, He does not require a cause.
[b][i][u]BEFORE ANYONE COMMENTS[/u][/i][/b], I would like you to state your opinion with a source, and I would have loved it if you at least read the OP. All truth is outside everyone's personal, political, and religious opinion. So don't state anything that is literally from your opinion.
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I'm atheist, but I still wonder where everything came from. If you really think deeply about it, where the -blam!- did everything come from? A computer simulation? Yeah, then where did the beings that made the simulation come from? From a God? Then where did God come from? Everyone came from an infinitely small point in space? Cool, but how was all that made in the first place? The "Universe is Infinite" theory? ....But did it all come from? How could everything just be there. It doesn't make since with current science. (Entropy, anyone?) Obviously, our current understanding of the Laws of Physics are wrong because they break down the closer you get to a Black Hole's even horizon. In the end, we'll probably never know for sure how the universe began and where it all came from. Everything will forever be just a theory. And that's a little scary, if you think about it. Science might eventually be able to explain everything that's happening in the universe around you, but it will never be able to explain with 100% certainty where everything came from.