I disagree as do many good scientists.
A vanishingly small number of biologists agree with you. Of those, nearly all have religious reasons for rejecting common descent.
I have maintained here and continue to maintain that is no room in the plain words of the scriptures to "interpret" the idea of common decent and or macro evolution.
Yes, I know that you have maintained that. What I'm telling you is that you are wrong, plain and simple. Your idea of what the plain words of the scriptures mean
is an interpretation, an interpretation that is very much a product of your culture and religious tradition. It has little to do with what the text was actually doing for its original audience, and your notion of permissible readings would exclude the approaches of Christians throughout history, including many church fathers and authors of the New Testament.
That's exactly the problem as I have maintained all along here.
They have "reconciled" what the scriptures clearly say and what much of science teaches. I.e. they bring their preconceived notions about the absolute fact of evolution with them in their study of the scriptures and impose that belief system on what the Holy Spirit has written for us.
And the problem as I see it is that you are bringing your preconceived notion that you have the one and only valid reading of the Bible and using it to reject the reality that God actually created.
It is never healthy for the church to compromise the plain truth of scripture with what the enemy says.
"Oh really? Has God really said?" is still the method of the enemy when it comes to assailing God's word.
It's also never healthy for Christians to confuse themselves with God, and to mistake their own ideas for God's very truth.
I have had no trouble with engaging you or anyone else here.
Seriously? You think insulting people on an internet forum and repeating the same couple of platitudes over and over is engagement? Lecturing people isn't engagement. How many theologians have you read that accept common descent? When have you
asked a Christian who accepts common descent how he or she reconciles evolution with the Bible, or why they read the Bible they way they do? (Note: how I read the Bible has nothing whatever to do with evolution. Convince me tonight that evolution is false, and I'll still won't read the early chapters of Genesis as an historical account of anything. Other Christians, by contrast,
do read Genesis as historically accurate, but also accept evolution.)
Also, you have yet to demonstrate that I really know common descent isn't a fact and am lying about it. You keep changing the subject, even while insisting that I really am dishonest. That hardly counts as engagement either.