This makes me chuckle, when you think of it, everything about God is illogical. The double standards by which TE operates is phenomenal, as it is okay for God to part the seas, walk on water, turn water to wine, yet when it comes to creation He is forced to adhere to rigidly, naturalistic laws and work in conjunction with what our "logic" dictates.
You've made several category errors here. Firstly, creation is a somewhat different beast to the other miracles in the Bible, as it was planet-wide, and we can observe the object of the miracle (earth and the cosmos) today. Something like walking on water were one-offs involving something that we cannot analyse today as it would not leave any lasting traces. Now, one could argue that no-one observes people walking on water for the most part, but as gluadys just pointed out, such inductive reasoning can be refuted by a single case, and such a case exists.
Secondly, TE does not claim that God has to "adhere" to laws. It claims that God INSTITUTED them and then used the laws to create.
By the way, creationism does not demand God creating all things by blinking them into existence. Yes, let's take one definition and apply it across the board...shall we?
What other definition suits the literalistic mindset? Even the merest hint that it might have been symbolic is enough to be denounced from the pulpit in some quarters.
I lament over the fact that this term "creationism" has been stigmatized by those who attempt to rationalize away the super-natural with science, both of which are not compatible with each other.
In your opinion only. Just because you can't reconcile the two because you insist on strawmanning TE, don't give those who can a hard time.
Truthfully, TE's should be considered "creation"-ists as well, as they (along with every other believer) hold to the truth that God created, they just differ in their beliefs as to how.
I have no beef with creationism in and of itself - and I'd be happy to identify with them as an evolutionary creationist as soon as their loudest members stop trying to tell scientists (including other Christians who are scientists, like myself) how to do their jobs and denying that we are Christians. Till then, not interested.
Creationism can also simply represent other methods or mechanisms of creation God used to create all things, but of which cannot be known or defined by man.
This is just mysticism, frankly.
And seeing how God consistently acts in the super-natural throughout all of scripture, it is a much more fitting ideal.
Yeah, because creating an entire system of functioning and interconnected laws of nature and use them to create is so much less impressive....