What I'm saying though is that death is not otherwise a requirement for evolution to occur. You only technically need reproduction. So if we're imagining a world where organisms don't die, you can still have evolution thereof as they change over time via differential reproductive success.
Survival of the fittest is about weaker creatures dying off and stronger ones proliferating, that suggests the death has an important role to play in evolution.
It's also interesting to me that Genesis 1 does make point of emphasizing the reproduction of organisms. I feel that it's suggesting an evolutionary process in that respect.
Genesis 1 has God telling the creatures to 'be fruitful and multiply'
2 And God blessed them, saying, “Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the waters in the seas, and let birds multiply on the earth.”
He said the same exact thing to Adam and Eve.
8 Then God blessed them, and God said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply;
Then we are not told how long it was from the creation of Adam and Eve until the fall but we know that she had not yet got pregnant. So the fall had to be very soon after creation. They had no birth control and they had been commanded to fruitful. If they had lived in the garden for a year she would have been pregnant at the very least. I think she would have been pregnant even if it had been 3 months.
Genesis 1 does state that animals reproduced to fill the waters, skies, etc.
Genesis 1 tells us they were commanded too, not that had yet done so. There is only 1 day between sea creatures/birds and land animals/humans.
If you otherwise assume normal reproductive cycles, it's a bit of a contradiction to assume that the Fall was pretty much right away.
I am assuming a normal reproductive cycle since nothing indicates otherwise. Eve would have been pregnant if she had lived there for a few cycles. She doesn't become pregnant until after the fall.
Sure you can. That's why we have different disciplines in science. So we can focus on and discuss different things.
Theology isn't science.
Evolution is simply about the change in populations of organisms over time. My question is whether God could have used such a process in differentiating living organisms and creating diversity of species on Earth. It would certainly fit better with what we observe in nature.
That's word semantics, we all know that evolution believes life started with a one cell creature and that it changed and branched off to become over time all all the creatures we have now. That is what we mean when we say "evolution believes one kind changed into another kind" I am also pretty sure you are fully aware of what we mean but chose constantly to ignore it.
I know what you believe, but I actually don't know what you mean in saying that it's impossible for one creature to change into another (per an evolutionary process). And certainly wouldn't have been impossible for an all powerful, supernatural God would it?
If God had wanted to use evolution he certainly could have done, but the Bible would read very differently if he had.
Evolution doesn't fit, its a square peg in a round hole. It has no explanation for sin, no explanation for the spirit, no explanation for the many, many Bible verses that contradict it.
Are we to believe contrary to the text, that Adam evolved over millions of years with no death occurring and woke up one day and God just gave him his spirit and said he was now perfect?