Ya know, thanks for responding in a conversational tone, even though I was a bit flippant in my post.
So, God says: let there be gravity.
And, God also says: let life evolve.
Is that what TE to you?
No. What you are describing is a Deist position. As Mallon pointed out.
The Deist sees God as setting up the natural laws, and then leaving the universe (perhaps watching, but not acting).
My TE position (I can't speak for all TE's) is that God usually acts through his natural laws. This is an active God. I see God as often acting through these (such in making the many beneficial mutations we see). I don't rule out supernatural action by God, but I don't invoke it when it is not needed. For instance, in planetary motion, or in baby development. God does form the baby and move the planets, but he does so through his natural laws. That's not the deist position, because in my view, God is acting today.
Remember, most Bibles explicitly say that it is God who is moving the planets and forming babies in wombs.
Psalm 139:
For you created my inmost being;
you knit me together in my mother’s womb.
I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made;
your works are wonderful,
I know that full well.
So I think we both recognize that baby formation in the womb is well understood as the actions of chemistry and physics. Yet the Bibles say that God is doing it. How? Through his natural world, just as with evolution and so on.
Make sense?
If not, then when did God do anything "special" to the evolution?
I think that God's divine process of evolution is pretty darn "special" whether supernatural miracles are involved or not. Amazing and glorious, in fact. Anything that can transform pond scum into birds, bats, baseball players and baboons is pretty incredible, right? Jesus is an awesome God!
However, I can't rule out that God did directly intervene in addition to guiding the whole process. If I had to guess, I'd guess so, but I don't know, and it's a glorious divine process either way.
If there is no need for that, then how do you know if God does anything to evolution since it began?
If there is no need for supernatural intervention, then God did it all through his natural process. I don't know which is the case, and either way, it is God who is doing it.
It seems that there is a fundamental mental shift to expand God out from being limited to acting only supernaturally, to a God who acts both ways. Being that nearly all of the action in the world we see is natural, a God that only acts supernaturally is a pretty inactive God. See why I say that TE gives a much more grand, awesome God?
Papias