The term theistic evolution is too nebulous, because the Wikipedia article says: [Theistic evolution] covers a wide range of beliefs about the extent of any intervention by God [...].Gman wrote:Ok, the question is why do some Christians except darwinian evolution? First off, Bible believing Christians (if they believe that God created everything), do NOT fully embrace Darwinian evolution. If they embrace evolution it is called theistic evolution. Theistic evolution, however, is completely unexceptionable to the public classrooms and to certain scientists due to its theistic premises and conclusion. It is therefore considered invalid and not scientific... Darwinian evolution or neo-Darwinism is a materialist philosophy, which is a worldview based on the idea that the final reality is impersonal matter or energy shaped into its current form by impersonal chance (not a god). Nowhere will you find theistic evolution taught in any public science book or a public class devoted to it.. That would be completely unacceptable...IgoFan wrote:My question first please.
Clearer now?
Let me be specific: many, many Christians DO support what science calls evolution, e.g., the progression of natural processes from the beginning of life, to one-celled animals, worms, fish, amphibians, reptiles, mammals, primates, humans, and finally, to Michael Jackson.
They agree that God did not have to intervene to create an eye, a blood-clotting mechanism, flagella, or whatever the ID creationism example-du-jour is.
Of course, they certainly accept God's creation of the early universe, and of souls at some point in primate evolution. And they accept some temporary suspension of the laws of physics for miracles here and there.
However, NONE of them agree with philosophical naturalism, which you seem to require to support evolution. Again I ask, so how can they support such a view of evolution, which you are vehemently against?