Remove my brain ? Most of us ? Did Jesus believe in Evolution, I believe he created on the fly .. I'll stick in his company .. God bless you ..
You made the point that I was going to: I don't believe "most of us" is true of the entire Christian community. According to a Pew chart in Wikipedia, evolution is accepted by 58% of Catholics, 54% of Orthodox, 51% of Mainline Protestant, 24% of Evangelical Protestants, 22% of Mormons, and only 8% of Jehovah's Witnesses. (Go, JW!) Given the level of indoctrination by the educational system over the past 50 years, these figures strike me as fairly surprising.
Long before I had dived into the work of Michael Behe, Stephen Meyer, et al. - indeed, even before I became a Christian at age 20 - I had a deep, abiding sense that something was radically, fundamentally wrong with the Darwinian explanation. Now, having dived deeply into the work of Behe, Meyer, et al., it is clear to me that something
is radically, fundamentally wrong with the Darwinian explanation. This has not caused me to leap immediately into the camp of the Young Earth Creationists, but it has certainly reinforced my belief that the confident pronouncements of evolutionists must be taken with a very large grain of salt because the evolutionary paradigm is every bit as much a "religion" with its own "fundamentalist true believers" as Young Earth Creationism.
At some point, theological views do have to accommodate the best scientific evidence. The position that the earth is not flat is not mandated by the Bible (neither is Young Earth Creationism), is contrary to every last bit of scientific evidence, and can be demonstrated as false by the simplest of observations. It's a purely theological position. The evidence for Darwinian evolution is not even
close to this level of certainty - and indeed, scientists are increasingly having to revise the paradigm or even admit that something is radically, fundamentally wrong with it. It has, for example, been fairly convincingly argued that the 4+ billion years over which evolution has supposedly worked its random magic are not even
close to sufficient time for what supposedly occurred to have actually occurred.
As leading Christian philosopher Alvin Plantinga has pointed out, the notion that evolution must be an unguided, purely materialistic process is not properly part of evolutionary theory. It is a "metaphysical add-on" for the sole purpose of bringing evolutionary theory under the umbrella of the materialistic, atheistic paradigm. God-initiated and God-guided evolution is equally consistent with evolutionary theory, albeit inconsistent with the special creation of humans the Bible describes. If forced by scientific reality to accept God-initiated and God-guided evolution, I guess I would do so - but I am a
long way from that point and continue to have a near-conviction that something is and will eventually be proven to be radically, fundamentally wrong with the evolutionary paradigm.