I want those who say that “evolution without a creator does not deny the existence of God” to explain the evolutionary process that created God as well.
How about this?
The evolution of more complex life forms from simpler forms through natural selection neither imples nor denies the existence of God.
Are we all happy now?
God was created?
Does he pray to his creator?
Etc, etc?
How does the occurrence of evolution
threaten the existence of God? Didn’t
God also put evolution in place?
I believe in both:
I base one belief on physical evidence
collected and analyzed by scientists,
and base the other on a faith that ‘there is
more to life than this’ and that the teachings of
those deep thinkers who have pondered this
stuff for centuries ought to be listened to.
However, if Billy has three apples and Cindy gives Sally a pear, when did Ferdinand III repeal the Punitive Estate Tax of Portugal?
Even evolutionists have to assume an “ummoved mover,” which is the moment in which life appeared. Unless, of course, they wish to assert that everything can be reduced to the laws of biochemistry with which we are familiar. Then there is the “small” matter of the nature of these laws. Given so much change, how can we assume the constancy of these laws? There is also the question of their universality. How do we know that they are the same even in the next galaxy?