Teddio, I don’t “believe” in any model of cosmology as if it were some kind of religion in which we must have faith without question. But I do acknowledge that some evidence are closer to the truth and more convincing than others.
The “Big Bang” has had too many unconvincing somersaults which left me very sceptical about its validity. It kicked-off with the Cosmic Background Radiation (which gave Hoyle brief doubt, but soon afterwards he published “Steady State Revisited”). However, this CBR had already been calculated at 3 degrees Kelvin back in the 1920’s by Sir Arthur Eddington and explained without resorting to a universal hot bang.
Apart from that, no one has ever explained how a universal mass of 4.2 x 10^52 kilograms, concentrated in a singularity, the mother and father of all black-holes (by definition), can blow up. Or if it was not mass but energy, then what supernatural force could contain 3.775 x 10^69 joules in a point in space. Or if neither mass nor energy, then what was the stuff that blew up.
Be that as it may, once the “stuff “ exploded and turned into mass obeying fully established universal laws, with a Schwarzschild radius of 6.3 billion light-years, there is no explanation how the distant galaxies escaped through the universal Event Horizon
I am very sceptical about a variable speed of light and variable gravity and “god-particles” and umpteenth new fields of force required to dig the BB out of its ever deepening hole, but I am most sceptical about the “age” of the BB universe which kept going up every time globular clusters were found to be older than their BB mother, until the big bangers settled on 13.7 billion years.
Very clever that, but this goes beyond coincidence into the bounds of fraud, for 13.7 billion years, hence a universal radius of 13.7 billion light-years, “just happens to be” the distance of the most remote galaxies which are preceding away (from any observer in the universe) at the speed of light and, therefore impossible to see, thus providing the big bangers with an “edge” of the universe.
Your point about the remote galaxies looking entirely different in their locality now to how we see them today, is valid and makes my point perfectly. For if what we see is how these galaxies looked some 12 (or more) billion years ago, then by what divine magic did they form and space out pretty much as nearby galaxies, so close to the birth of the BB hydrogen, their building blocks?
Eddington, Hoyle, Gold and Bondi (may they rest in peace) missed out on a Nobel Prize, but whoever works out (without fear of Genesis) the mechanism for free neutrons coming into being and dividing within 12 minutes of their birth into atoms of hydrogen at the rate of 9.656E-38 grams/cubic meter/sec and small packages of energy (CBR?) without the need for a creator-god, would deserve a lorry-load of Nobel Prizes, for sheer guts.