Incorrect.
Life can only come from life.
The English words in Genesis 2:7 seem pretty plain.
God breathed into him the breath of life.
Life had to exist for God to transfer life to the man He had formed.
God is alive.
He has a Mind, Spirit and Body.
So no, God believing creationist do not have to accept that abiogenesis happened period.
God Bless,
ICANT, the Law of Biogenesis being used to claim that abiogenesis is impossible is a
specific reference. It does not claim simply that living things create life - it says that maggots come from maggots and not rotting meat, that people come from people and not clay or dust. It's about reproduction, not being manufactured by an external entity.
And as far as God being alive or not...well, it would be awfully tricky to fit God with any scientific definition of life, since we can't observe him. Usually we say that all living things respire, reproduce, respond to stimuli, etc. In no scientific definition of "life" do "mind, spirit, and body" ever come into play. Does God respire, meaning process energy to survive? That would imply he needs air or food or is otherwise dependant on a chemical process for survival - which of course wouldn't fit with any description of God I;ve ever heard of. Does he reproduce? Maybe - possibly one could count Jesus as his direct offspring, but it really doesn't seem to fit since Jesus was human. For the rest of his "children" it seems to be more of a "creation" process and less of a "reproduction." Does he respond to stimuli? Not that anyone currently can demonstrate - studies involving prayer and other tests of God's response to stimuli invariably end as being ineffective, and that no deity responded to the stimuli.
There are other definitions of life (living things are very difficult to define in general - life doesn't seem to be so black/white a distinction), but none of them seem to fit well with a "spiritual" entity. It would seem that "spiritual" life and terrestrial life are apples and oranges, and the two are not the same.
But all of that is besides the point. Genesis specifically states that God Created man from dust, and made that dust live. Nonliving matter became alive. That is abiogenesis, simply not by the naturalistic methods that are typically implied by the word. Life as defined in terrestrial terms did not eternally exist in the Bible - it had to be Created by God. Plants sprung from the ground, fish spawned in the sea...everywhere living things were appearing where nothing living existed before. We could separate it out if you'd like, and call it "Divine Abiogenesis," but we're still talking about life coming from non-life, whether by naturalistic means or via divine machintions.