Once upon a time (1990s), I was Newsletter Editor for the ASA, went to the Annual Meetings, and have known all the major players in the Debate: all the ID people (Bill Dembski, Paul Nelson, Phil Johnson - the ringleader, Jon Wells, Walter Bradley, Robert Kaita, Michael Behe, and the best one: Steve Meyer (
https://idthefuture.com/1259). Theistic evolution or evolutionary creationists include
Denis Lamoureux, Howard Van Til, and Keith Miller. ASA is the largest and oldest evangelical-founded organization of Christians in science and has historically been intended to be a place where Christians in science can discuss all the angles as a forum. However, given the divisiveness of the evolution-creation issue, ASA has been pulled internally by both ID and TE proponents. The IDers have largely left or at least were no longer prominent when I left ASA (for other reasons), and migrated toward the Discovery Institute in Seattle, funded by the first-generation entrepreneur Weyerhauser. ASA has departed from being a neutral or objective forum by taking a pro-mRNA drug position during the covid affair, for instance, in the ASA journal (
PSCF) and the TE voice has largely taken over the journal. Because of the high-spirited tension between IDers and TEers in ASA, the book ASA produced,
God Did It, But How? covers the common ground of affirming the Creator while recognizing the often speculative nature of the science-religion debate.
I do not always see a clear line of demarcation between ID and TE except at the extremes. Clouding this categorization is the young versus old earth issue, for instance. There have been both young-earth and old-earth IDers. People like Walter Thorson would not be included in the grouping with ID but then he is supportive of the book
The Mystery of Life's Origin: Reassessing Current Theories by Charles Thaxton, Walter Bradley and Roger Olson (1984, Philosophical Library Inc.) who, like the IDers, are critical of problems with evolutionary theory. There are different levels of sophistication in what is being said. I believe Steve Meyer is one of the more profound. The young-earth creationists (YECs) of the Henry Morris, Duane Gish variety have all but died out because the weight of the load to provide convincing support needed for a young earth is crushing. (It is not unlike the problem of demonstrating a superior explanation for a flat earth.) Morris and Gish exited the ASA in the late 1970s and ASA lost almost all of its YEC influence. The YECers wanted ASA to take a YEC position, and when they lost, they left. The IDers did not leave so dramatically but shifted their center of attention elsewhere.
So, if someone held a gun to my head and made me choose a label to invoke, it would probably be ID but with TE leanings. I am an electronics research engineer; what do I know of the many specialties in science required to have an expert opinion (should one exist) on how God created? I have a few
published articles in the
ASA Journal (now called
PSCF) and
one in the ID journal Origins & Design. Those probably say enough for extended discussion.