I don't see how the laws of physics apply if there is a single dimensionless point of infinite density. And how do singularities develop in the first place?
The singularity is seen only if you take the naive laws of physics and run time backward; this makes no allowance for:
1. The quantum mechanics of the electroweak unification, or that force's unification with the color (aka strong) force; note as well that this second unification has not been worked out in any detail, so extrapolations from known LOP may or may not accurately represent reality;
2. quantum gravity, which we have no consistent description of in physics at this time;
3. other unquantifiable effects which may or may not include the Higgs and Goldstone bosons created by the spontaneous symmetry breaking of the electroweak force, and probably will be needed to properly explain color/electroweak and GUT force symmetry breakings, any or all of which may yield new particles, new pseudo-forces, and new mathematics to describe them.
Without any allowance for these things- at least some of which are known to exist- one has a very naive view of physics that produces impossible things like singularities. To claim that "it couldn't have been that way because how can you have a singularity" is a classical straw-man; neither physicists nor cosmologists believe there was any singularity (which is the negation of the straw man), they instead believe that the fact that the fact that using naive physics gives a singularity means that naive physics does not accurately describe what happened.
The entire point of science is to abandon explanations like, "a miracle occurred," or "it's supernatural and can't ever be explained," and instead to have faith that there is a rational, natural explanation for every event, capable of being discovered and understood by the human mind, and not requiring any supernatural or miraculous intervention to make it occur.