For me, I believe the Bible to be the inspired, inerrant Word of God and therefore to be trusted.
Why?
I mean, what we have here is a clear case of the bible saying one thing, and actual scientific inquiry saying another. As much as you like to think that there's some controversy, the fact is that there is none. Hell, we don't even have to go to evolution. Find me
one doctor who thinks that the bible's cure for leprosy is the way to go. It's patently obvious that what the bible recommends is, in some cases, simply not what we see in nature.
So what do you do in this case? Do you reject the scientific method? The results of empiricism? The clear benefits drawn from them? I mean, in the case of leprosy, it's the difference between suffering from a crippling, chronic, contagious disease that will leave you scarred, disabled, and maimed, and healing from it in a matter of months. And you'd reject this in favor of the far more expedient, albeit considerably less
effective biblical method. Why?
See, this is the stopping point I always hit with Christians. "The bible is literally true." "Why do you believe that when it says things that are clearly false?" "The bible says it, it can't be wrong." "But here's really strong evidence indicating that it is, in fact, false!" "The bible says it, it can't be wrong."
Why? How are you so sure that the bible is literally true? How do you place this much trust in a
book? If the bible described a flat earth, would you reject the experiments you could easily reproduce yourself that demonstrate that it is, in fact,
not flat? Why? What justification do you have for giving the bible the final word? What affords it
this degree of trust?
Furthermore, I believe that creation scientists have done a wonderful job explaining to the public, in a way that most non-scientists can understand, the massive problems with the theory of evolution.
You're wrong. These "scientists" are
laughingstocks in their disciplines. They're the biological equivalent of the Flat Earth Society. What they say makes sense until you actually examine the evidence, at which point it falls apart. Often, they appeal to views of science which are simply not true - Ken Ham's "historical vs. observational science" line, while oft-repeated by creationists, is not how science works and simply does not apply in any meaningful sense (whack Ken Ham with a baseball bat, and watch how quickly he wants "historical science" to piece together how his kneecap was shattered). The explicit
claims made are never published in the scientific literature and are often debunked within hours by internet skeptics, because they're based on a fundamentally flawed understanding of the science involved. This is why I brought up the scientific consensus in the first place. You find this convincing. However, among the people who study biology, almost nobody does. Why is that?
I have yet to come across the same situation in the world of evolution.
Oh?
http://evolution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/article/evo_01
Here's an introductory course on evolution, what we know, and how we know it, from one of the leading universities in the world. It's written for the high school level, and everything therein should be perfectly clear to
anyone. Yeah, the responses to certain objections can be complex. When the objection is "the bacterial flagellum cannot have evolved", the answer will
necessarily have to delve into the genetics of bacterial evolution. Science is hard, and understanding it can take work. It's
always easier to poke holes in a scientific theory than it is to defend that scientific theory. Watch, I'll do it:
"If vaccines are safe, why are there so many reported cases in the VAERS database?"
In order to answer this question, you have to understand how epidemiology works, and what the VAERS database actually is for. And a lot of people get suckered in by this, and think that because people report vaccine reactions to VAERS, it means they must be true. It takes a lot more work to debunk false claims than it does to make them. This is why the "Gish Gallop" is such an effective tactic in formal debates.
Rom 1:20 “For since the creation of the world God's invisible qualities—his eternal power and divine nature—have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that men are without excuse.” Rom 1:25 “They exchanged the truth of God for a lie, and worshiped and served created things rather than the Creator—who is forever praised. Amen.”
The above quote from the New Testament makes it clear that man has been able to understand about God from the very beginning and not at some distant point in the future when animals supposedly evolved into humans and became "in the image of God." It also makes it clear that God is the source of all truth and not fallible mankind. Amen to that.
This is probably my favorite verse in the entire bible. "Men are without excuse". Yeah, we might be, if there was actually evidence to support the claims made. There isn't. Look, I can do this too.
"The flying spaghetti monster is known in the heart of all men. Those who deny him do so because they are corrupt and must be purged."
It's nothing more than psychological manipulation. "No, they don't
really disagree with you, they're just lying to themselves, and any evidence presented must be wrong because you're right". Well, guess what: there's another point where the bible is
wrong. Epistemology. The list of people who knew about the existence of this particular god before being
told about it is very, very short.