Life is Too Complex to Have Not Been Created
     Researchers agree that the spontaneous manufacture of amino acids, nitrogen bases, sugars, etc. is no problem, and have demonstrated this. (Urey,Miller1974)  There have even been a number of successes assembling as many as twelve nucleotides into strings under prebiotic conditions, and polypeptides can then be formed from simple amino acids.  The discoveries of Watson and Crick in the 1950's demonstrated that polynucleotides have an intrinsic ability, almost a desire to associate with complimentary strings, hence DNA.  When these strands drift apart, due to intense heat, they may serve as templates for new models, and self-replication has begun.  They can grow in length by the same process.  The template synthesis is not perfect, occasionaly a nucleotide is put in a different position, causing the mutation that leads to diversity.  Natural selection preserves the gains, and eliminates the mistakes.
     The process of molecular self assembly had millions of years to begin.  It took place, not in an isolated area, but on a world wide scale.  Once the process was started, and the proper molecules had bonded, it suddenly moved into an entirely different game, that of diversification.  While the numerical odds of it occuring seem staggering at first, also staggering is the incredible amount of time it had to work with.