There's a thing in Quantum Mechanics called the uncertainty principal. It basically means that the position and velocity (and therefore, I assume, energy) of a particle is not definite. This means that even in a vacuum, random particles can literally appear out of nowhere. This accounts for the radiation that Black Holes emit, as well as a number of other things, including the big bang.
But wait, never mind, I obviously know nothing about your religion and therefore cannot inform you of this.
There was nothing religious about it you butt-hurt goon. I got that from a scientific website about the First Law of Thermodynamics. If you ignore even your own science to make a bash against religion, you are a sad person indeed.
Secondly, that's specifically called the Heisenburg Uncertainty Principal. Just because we can't track it does not mean it just appears out of nowhere. It still exists somewhere. That is basically saying, "Hey, we don't see those atoms, they must not exist. Oh wait, there's one, okay, now it exists." So that doesn't answer anything. As for the radiation black holes emit, that's not technically coming from the black hole, but an eruption of subatomic particles close to the inner edge of the event horizon. Anything that hits the black hole never escapes.
I'm talking to you on your terms here, science. If you want to keep crying over a lost argument in another thread, take to my inbox and quit embarrassing yourself.