No. You've asked, "there still has to be something, or Someone behind it, who put it in motion, no?" I've replied, "no." You're begging the question here, assuming the initial point (evolution and big bang) explicitly as entirely true while you argue it. I understand your position well enough, but can not agree that this is what the Word of God says or intends or even suggests. Adam was directly created by God.
I am assuming it to be true for the sake of the argument. Let me rephrase that, then, for peace of mind: IF the theory that is currently presented by science is true, I don't see how that excludes God as the Creator and originating force behind it.
As I mentioned in the post as well, I cannot claim that the theory is 100% correct, as nothing we know is: we are constantly moving onward in understanding the creation around us. But I see nothing in the theory that would endanger my belief in God and that would undermine Christianity. Scientists who outright deny the existence of God are as biased as Christians who deny anything revealed by science, so don't look to them as objective representatives of science -- they have a very specific agenda. Only an open approach and honest observation of the facts can lead us to a satisfactory end. I believe that God endowed us with free will, curiosity and intelligence for a purpose, and as it is written in Genesis, when he created man (as with everything else), he saw what he did was good.
The reason I asked that, and pardon me if I wasn't completely clear, it might have been lost in the tangle: I don't see why it necessarily needs to be an allegory. I consider the account of creation in Genesis as symbolic, not allegorical.Remember when we spoke initially about the virgin birth? You asked a question about allegory. You believe that the Word of God in Genesis is allegory. But consider His words: "The LORD God formed man from the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul." - (Gen 2:7) Now, consider your words: "What exactly [does this] point to as an allegory?"