Spanners....
I’m going to inject something else into this discussion, just to see what happens.
Talk of god(s) always seems to assume that the god existed ab initio and was responsible for everything that came after, i.e. god was the creator.
Hypothesise: **** sapiens manages to survive (unlikely though that may be) long into the future. Technology develops and man replaces his short-lived and fragile biological body with a better, more durable synthetic equivalent. Development continues and eventually the synthetic body is dispensed with and mind is liberated from material constraints. The many minds thus liberated coalesce to form a single, non-material, mind which is capable of manipulating energy to achieve material results, for example to spark the development of life in aggregations of organic chemicals.
Hypothesise further: current evidence and thought seems to indicate that primitive (single-celled and simpler) life is probably fairly abundant in the universe, but complex (multi-celled) life, and in particular advanced complex life, is probably very rare, and possibly vanishingly rare. However, the universe is a pretty big place, so even a vanishingly rare possibility could well have happened on a fair number of occasions. Thus the single, non-material, mind may already have been in existence for a very long time.
Questions:
Q1. Is the single, non-material, mind effectively god?
Q2. If so, is god thus the culmination of evolution (and everything else), not the originator of evolution (and everything else)?
Answers on a postcard, please, preferably accompanied by a £50 note and a dozen bottles of your best home-brew.