Big claim, but no evidence that I can see. Entropy in the thermodynamic sense is suggested very low during the big bang. Entropy always increasing is a feature of the thermodynamic definition. There are other definitions, and they also often increase, but they do so because they are closely related to the thermodynamic entropy. If you reject the part of entropy that is very low during the big bang, you have also rejected the part that says that entropy always increases. The big bang is an example of order, in the most scientific sense in the naturalistic explanation of the beginning.