Quarlep,
If you are still here,the guys have 'gone mathematical' on us!
[Like 'going postal' but for physics peeples, so much more restrained [LOL].]
What you can take away from the earlier posts holds.
The reason you may have thought energy was 'infinite' in a BH is that it appears spacetime curvature [gravity] at the singularity at the 'center' of a BH is 'infinite'. But that's not a good description because the singularity is not well described by any theory we have, not general relativity, not quantum mechanics. So as we get closer and closer to the singularity spacetime curves more and more; we say the curvature 'diverges'...becoming arbitrarily large. That's usually a sign a theory no longer being applicable. This is as we get close to Planck scale.
So as we approach what is believed to be the tinest of scales, the Planck regime, we don't have proper descriptions. Some say space and time and everything else lose their individual meaning as quantum jitters become extreme and all we can so far estimate is a 'quantum foam'...
So the overall energy and gravity of a BH is finite, but the most recent posts are discussing exactly how that should be calculated. People have an analogous problem precisely describing the overall energy in the universe. In curved spacetime, energy, gravity, even time and distance and such become complicated.