Organic matter is simply energy. If God exists, then God is energy as well, and hence no different from organic matter.Everything that "exists" is energy. If it isnt energy then it is space, which is nothingness.So the only way a God can exist if this God is energy, and hence this energy came into being just as everything else did after the big-bang.Further, there is no difference between "something" and "nothing". If we have no visible matter (which makes up around 3% of the universe), then we have energy, if we have no energy (which can neither be created nor destroyed, and hence impossible), we have space, which is nothingess, but "something" none-the-less since it can be percieved (and anything that can be percieved is indeed "something). So one can ask "who created space"?The fact is that energy is eternal. If God exists, then God is energy as well. There is nothing else for God to be "made of". If God is energy, then God is bound by the laws that govern energy.So to state that God is not in the same category as things that are created is false, since "anything" that exists is indeed energy, sans space.Unless of course you believe that God consists of something other than energy, a physical impossibility. And if you do believe this, then id like to know what "it" is.So in the end, we simply end up with e=mc2. We know that energy is eternal, and that energy transitions from state to state and is every changing. If God exists, then God would be a fixed-mass of energy, which exists independently of other forms of energy, which is impossible. When all is said and done, the idea of God does not answer the questions of the universe in any reasonable fashion. In-fact, such answers involving God contradict science and offer no real solution. Hence, the idea of God by those who believe in God shouldn't be applied to such questions. This isnt to say that a belief in God is bad, far from it. But such belief serves a different role in ones life.