Rafael said:
You may be smarter than the PHDs I'm reading in Strobel's book then, to make your statements, and of course that is your right.
Or I could just have looked at better sources.
The scientists say that it is not longer a case of religion vs science anymore, but a case of science vs science.
I can't think of a single actual biologist who has any doubts about the basic theory of evolution at this point. There may have been some in the past. Once, a long time ago, I could have named you a creationist geologist, Glenn Morton. He presented lectures and papers on the key questions creationist geologists had to look into, and found that no one had the slightest interest in trying to develop a workable scientific theory; eventually, he admitted that the world was as old as it looked, and that he needed to rethink his approach to the Bible.
Note that last part; he has not rejected the Bible. He has taken this experience as guidance, as natural theology and general revelation, which allow better understanding of the Bible.
Of course the same debates arise, and it boils down to faith - whether God can control and do what He says from His dimension of timelessness or not.
God can do anything. God can give us all an ice cream cone every day. Do you deny that God can give us an ice cream cone every day? The Bible says ask, and it shall be given. I am sure that at least one child has earnestly asked that everyone get an ice cream cone every day. So, are you denying that God can do what God says?
Or are you, perhaps, going to argue that God
could do that, but that it was not actually what God said would happen, and I should accept the plain evidence before me?
Personally, I have no evidence that He cannot do as He says, and on the contrary that it is all possible "scientifically", especially with the properties of time and eternity making a thousand years from one point of reference the same as a day in another. As I said, the book is very interesting and readable.
I have seen a lot of creationist apologetics, and they have generally left me sickened and repulsed. I would rather my faith be a search for truth than a search for pretending I was right all along.