ConnorD said:
Exactly. This is really the question I am asking. Just why does everything move?
Imagine you've got a bucket of sand. You shake the bucket ... the sand particles get tossed around a little bit ... a second or two later, they are all at rest again.
What causes them to come to rest is the fact that collisions between sand particles are inelastic, which is to say that each time a pair of grains knock into each other, they lose some of their total kinetic energy. So, after a few dozen or so rapid collisions between each other, the sand particles have lost most of the kinetic energy you gave them by shaking the bucket.
Atoms and molecules are different from sand particles in that their collisions with each other are typically elastic, which means that they merely transfer kinetic energy from one to the other, keeping the total energy between them constant. So, even if you were able to somehow find a box of molecules, all more or less stationary, and gave it the slightest little disturbance, you would set all the molecules in motion ... forever! Sure, they'd keep banging into each other, changing speed and direction with each collision, but they won't really slow down - at least not if your box is built in a special way.
And even in a poorly built box, they will only slow down so much, till the point that the molecules on the outside of the box start transferring energy inwards by banging against the outside walls. The little bit of slowing down that happens in the box is not due to the elastic collisions between the free floating molecules inside, but rather due to the mildly inelastic collisions between the molecules inside the box and its walls.
To summarize, molecules keep moving today, because they were all set in motion "at the beginning", and they do a pretty good job of retaining their energies even after gazillions of collisions.