It doesn't follow at all that evolution undermines the notion that Jesus came as a savior, -57. However, one's interpretation of evolution is definitely connected with Christ. Granted, some evolutionary scientists are atheistic and coal upon evolution to back them up here. However, they are interpreting evolution to mean we are just random accidents in a universe which has no ultimate purpose. But is that an accurate understanding of the evolutionary process? There are major thinkers who have challenged this bleak picture. If evolution is purposeless in nature, why is their a definite direction? What does it seem to be moving upward, creating more and sensitive organisms? Why consider us a freak accident, alone and up against a universe otherwise composed of passive, inert, dead matter? In my why of thinking, evolution is telling us that a matter is alive, that the universe is a gigantic organism, not a machine. If so, the universe must have a mind, just as does any complex organism, and that means God. If the Incarnation is to be considered truly revelatory, then it has to represent God's general MO with the world and that means the universe can be thought of ass the body of God. You might try reading a major 20th-century thinker, Teilhard de Chardin. He introduces the concept of the Cosmic Christ and presents evolution as the hand by which God delivers us to himself. Bottom line: evolution does not necessitate one become an atheist, and could actually further develop your understanding of God's revelation through Christ.