This is fine. However, I don't think many people are aware of such definitions. I don't think the word "Creationism" should be reserved only for YEC people.
Whether they are aware or not has nothing to do with whether they
should be aware.
I did use YEC as a subset of creationism. The commonality of all forms of creationism is:
1. God created some things instantaneously in their present form.
2. One of those things is human beings. All forms of creationism have humans being specially created.
Science is not derived from studying creation. If so, it suggests that if we do not study creation, then there would be no science. Creation results in menifestation via "material". There are sciences that do not deal with material at the beginning.
All science studies the physical universe.
What did God create? The physical universe, right? Therefore all science studies Creation -- what God created. I think you have mistaken the noun form for a verb form. You think "creation" means how things originated. That's not the definition I am using.
Gravity is part of Creation. It is also the means of the creation of galaxies, stars, and planets.
Now, why don't you think science is also a method by which God created? Couldn't God have created by the methods discovered by science?
I would say science is the expression of wisdom given to us by God.
If that is so, then why do you reject science so frequently? That would mean you are rejecting God.
If it possible, but I would only put a small bet on it. Because I see too many problems in it (I am going to initiate one in another thread). I still think that it is true that men are made from dust. How was it done as understood by science, I do not know.
Science doesn't need to know the exact mechanism by which God turned dust into proteins, lipids, sugars, DNA, etc.
But no, God is telling us in His Creation that He did not create humans this way. Creating the way you say has certain consequences. One of those is that there are not going to be fossils of individuals that have features of both H. erectus and H. sapiens. Or of H. erectus and H. habilis. Or fossils of individuals that have features of both H. habilis and A. afarensis. Instead, IF what you say is true, then there are only going to be fossils of modern H. sapiens.
Instead, that isn't what we see. We see instead a series of fossil individuals linking us to H. erectus, H. erectus to H. habilis, and H. habilis to A. afarensis. Individuals that are so in-between each species that we really can't say which species they are.
True statements cannot have false consequences. Since the statement "God created us from dust" has false consequences, it can't be true.
Here is where the faith comes in. I truly think the problem OE faced is not less or lighter than that of YE.
The data says otherwise.
Science leads to faith. Science does not prove faith. If OE leads you to your faith, that is fine. But do not jump too early to say YE is wrong. We simply do not know yet.
1. Wearing my scientist hat, science does not lead to faith. Science is agnostic. My faith comes from outside science. There is nothing in science to contradict my faith.
2. There was overwhelming evidence by 1831 to say that YE is wrong. Sorry. That's the way it is. To say "we simply do not know yet" is to turn your back on God and what He tells us in His Creation.
"
Many evangelical Christians today suppose that Bible believers have always been in favor of a "young-universe" and "creationism." However, as any student of the history of geology (and religion) knows, by the 1850s all competent evangelical Christian geologists agreed that the earth must be extremely old, and that geological investigations did not support that the Flood "in the days of Noah" literally "covered the whole earth." Rev. William Buckland (head of geology at Oxford), Rev. Adam Sedgwick (head of geology at Cambridge), Rev. Edward Hitchcock (who taught natural theology and geology at Amherst College, Massachusetts), John Pye Smith (head of Homerton Divinity College), Hugh Miller (self taught geologist, and editor of the Free Church of Scotland's newspaper), and Sir John William Dawson (geologist and paleontologist, a Presbyterian brought up in a fundamentalist atmosphere, who also became the only person ever to serve as president of three of the most prestigious geological organizations of Britain and America), all rejected the "Genesis Flood" as an explanation of the geologic record (or any part of that record), and argued that it must have taken a very long time to form the various geologic layers. Neither were their conclusions based on a subconscious desire to support "evolution," since none of the above evangelical Christians were evolutionists, and the earliest works of each of them were composed before Darwin's Origin of Species was published. The plain facts of geology led them to acknowledge the vast antiquity of the earth. And this was before the advent of radiometric dating."
I would also suggest 2 books covering the history:
Davis A. Young The Genesis Flood: A Case Study of the Church's Response to Extrabiblical Evidence
Gillespie: Genesis and Geology
You should be able to get both in your local public library. You can find part of the first online at:
http://www.bringyou.to/apologetics/p82.htm
And you can find more of the evidence showing YE to be wrong at
http://www.lordibelieve.org/page15.html
http://www.asa3.org/ASA/PSCF/2003/PSCF12-03Fischer.pdf
In fact, you will want to read most of what is at
www.asa3.org