I think that my point here is that, ok we might just happen to live in the one universe in 10^30 that can result in complex forms of baryonic matter and intelligent life, but if the expansion of the universe had not accelerated around 6B years ago, then in the distant future we might be left with toxic galaxies and many extinctions of intelligent life within them.
I will call this the continuing anthropic principle (CAP) as opposed to SAP FAP and CRAP :)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthropic_principle#The_Anthropic_Cosmological_Principle
In support of the Anthropic principle if one found a coin stood on its edge one would be less inclined to think that it got there through tossing and more inclined to think that something non random was responsible. But to disprove the principle outright the observer would somehow have to find many examples of other random universes that are unstable or failed in some way to produce baryonic matter as interesting as our own. I am assuming that we are at least sometimes intelligent down here. :)
In conclusion, we can never know the answer to this question with certainty and hence it becomes a faith based concept. Even the increased expansion of the universe could be random along with all the other lucky coincidences.