Just a terrific post Hans and no, I have no supportable answers either. Both rely on the theory that something happened, either by what you refer to as magic or by science. My opinion is God created a universe that contains both. Man has shown a lot of interest in finding answers to the science part of the equation. Still something is missing or perhaps it has just yet to have been found. Both science and religion could use a bit of cross-training, in my opinion.
Well, but the problem some of us have is that even assuming something missing there, it's not at all obvious how do you get to God from there. In fact, to specifically the Christian God.
I mean, let's say SOMETHING provided the energy there. It's a bit of a stretch to get from there to even that it was something with an intelligence, or that it was its intent to create a universe.
I mean, the current understanding is that the universe started as a gravitational singularity, i.e., the centre of a black hole. (Technically we could still be in a black hole.) Which, as far as we know, could always have been there until some instability made it explode. Or maybe there is no such thing as "before", as both space and time as we know them didn't exist yet before the bang.
But let's say there's something that could provide the extra oomph to make the black hole go kablooie. Does it have to have intelligence or intent? Well, not really. For all we know, it could be a natural phenomenon. Stars go kablooie all the time without someone blowing them up. Why can't a singularity do the same?
But ok, let's say it was something with intelligence, just for argument sake. Did it intend to create a universe. We don't really know, and it's far from the only possibility. For all we know, the universe could be a side-effect for something else, created or not.
Let's say it has both intelligence and intent... does it care about you personally? We're talking a being which provided enough energy for 9 SEXTILLION stars in the observable universe. That is 9,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 stars. Kinda makes one feel insignificant, innit? Does such a being actually have the interest and time to micro-manage something human-sized, or is the experiment really at universe scale?
To give you a sense of proportions, last Christmas I had a lot of food, and, well, some eventually went bad. You can pretty much imagine the bacteria in my pot of soup thinking I must care about each of them individually, because I created that pot of soup for them to live in. But in truth, not only I didn't create it for them, nor care about an individual bacterium, nor will make miracles for it, but they're something I can't even see. And actually they're something unwanted, not something I want to care deeply about. I wanted some soup, not the bacteria.
That's not even hyperbole, but actually a mild analogy. The size and scope difference between you and the universe is actually even more tremendous than between a bacterium and my pot of soup.
Etc.
So, yes, there are some missing steps. All the above and then some are extra missing steps you need to solve before you can go, "therefore God." God-did-it actually needs a bit more than the science version does.