When people like you talk like you do, unfortunately it makes people like me have to repeat myself ... with a little more, shall we call it, emphasis?
Putting more emphasis on a deliberate confusion of terms does not make the confusion go away. It just proves the "big lie" theory: if you repeat a lie enough times and loudly enough, you may get some people to believe it. But that still does not make it so.
Therefore, let me rephrase: macroevolution can take a hike.
In other words, "I don't want to hear it" -- the flip side of the "big lie" theory. If I can't hear it, I don't have to consider it.
We did not come from a common ancestor; we came from a common designer.
"We came from a common Designer," is not science, it is philosophy. Philosophy I happen to agree with, but philosophy that has no business in a discussion of science.
"We did not come from a common ancestor," is a statement for which you have no scientific evidence. All evidence points to evolution, and all reasonable models of evolution imply common descent. You even implicitly agree with the models pointing that way when you "explain away" the evidence with your "embedded age" claims.
I agree with those that say that we weren't there, and so we can't be sure of what happened. But any scientific theory (model), if it is to be scientific, must fit all of the evidence, and should be parsimonious (see Occam's Razor). Your embedded age claim is neither. It is not scientific.
And our minds and mathematics and anything else can take a backseat to what God did in Genesis 1.
Genesis is not a science textbook.
As a Christian I agree that God created the heavens and the Earth, as per Genesis 1:1. But the stories in Genesis 1 & 2 are stories. The first story is a hymn of praise to God the Creator of all, Genesis 2 is a parable answering the question of why we have a sinful nature if we were created by a perfect and loving God. Neither is the literal, physical, or historical "Gospel truth."
I'd like to see mathematics explain the Trinity, or Jesus feeding the 5000; or your 'manageable chunks' explain Jesus walking on water.
You are asking Science to do something that it not only was not designed to do, but it was specifically designed not to do. Science studies the laws of nature. Miracles are suspensions of the laws of nature. That is why they are called
supernatural.
Science does not deny the supernatural, but it does ignore it. Not out of contempt, or disbelief, or any other negative motive, but again, because we need to break Creation into manageable chunks to understand it. Science is what we call those disciplines that look at the chunks involving the laws of nature. There are other disciplines (philosophy, theology, soterology, etc) that examine supernatural chunks.