@manoffaith3112, by the same logic, the universe itself—which contains space and time—is eternal. It has always existed. This is what Stephen Hawking argues in A Brief History of Time, saying a creator is completely unnecessary.
I have researched the Bible, and I’d certainly be surprised if Yahweh is real. He seems like an amalgamation of other Mesopotamian deities—Marduk, Enlil, and Sin in particular. The creation story has many similarities with the Babylonian Enuma Elish, in which Marduk defeats the sea (like Yahweh does in the psalms), spreads out the dome of the sky to separate the waters, and brings light into being by speaking. Genesis’ flood story is nearly identical in detail to the earlier Atrahasis epic from Mesopotamian mythology. The cult of the moon-god Sin, like the Hebrews, avoided working on “shabatu” days, and the name Mount Sinai comes from this Babylonian god.
I mean, Yahweh certainly could be real. But so could Marduk, slayer of Tiamat, master of 50 divine names. I don’t really see why you’d think one is more likely to exist than the other. Perhaps you’d care to explain?