So you think origins of life is a scientific question?
Well then, some news for you. Questions on origins of life and afterlife are inherently religious, you can't get more religious than that. And when science gets into these questions it becomes another religion, that people follow based on faith, not hard evidence, because you don't have and never will have hard evidence for afterlife and origins of life.
So this thread is nothing more that an argument between two religions.
You have it backwards. Religion is an object of interpreting belief. Science is an object of interpreting facts.
When religion does not mesh with Science, that is called Dogma. It is the rejection of data, because it does not match belief. Science attempts to take observe facts and build from there. Dogma takes accepted belief and attempt to bend fact to it. Thus Science was able to change when observations led to the conclusion that the Earth revolved around the Sun, but Religious Dogma fought and threatened when faced with the same observations.
Can anyone "Prove' the scientific conjecture as to the age of the earth? Not without a time machine or FTL travel. Are there facts that support an "Old Earth" more than a young earth? Yes.
Science tries to tie al the facts together, while the "religious" POV tries to come up with reasons to question the theories made from observations.
Take the tree Rings. You are quick to point out that the oldest living tree, aged by rings is less than 5000 years old. You ignore the dead trees laying nearby with over 7,000 rings. You ignore the colonial plants that using the observed growth rings are extrapolated to be tens of thousands of years old.
You ignore the simple geological findings of primitive life remains at lowest levels of striated rock.
You liKe your Halos that Gently uses to theorize a young earth, but ignore the ones nearby that indicate much greater age.
If it doesn't fit, you deny it. At least in the Scientific view, you look for reasons for unexpected results, like Radon leaks from the Uranium as a cause of Gentry's Halos. It matches the observation and the underlying theories.