So... very... very... frustrating...
It's like banging your head against a brick wall.
I have cut out a lot of your post because it is the same stuff we've been over a thousand (no, I'm not being "literal") times before.
I broke them into three topics
#1 - your views on Scripture
#2 - your views on science
#3 - your views on truth
It is not surprising that we disagree with each other substantially on all three topics.
#1 - your views on Scripture
- The Scriptures cannot be studied "scientifically" with any degree of accuracy.
- Still, it is not a science book. It doesn't teach or affirm the laws of physics.
- If God had used evolution or billions of years, He would not have told us otherwise.
- Genesis 1 is not written as a metaphor, and the Fourth Commandment, written by the finger of God, states that He created the world in six days. It is not possible to get any more specific.
- The Scriptures state that man was created by God on the sixth day of creation.
- Either you render the largest part of the Scriptures to be mythology and falsehood, or you acknowledge that God DID create the universe in six days and He allowed a mechanism by which species could go forth and multiply.
The problem I have here is that points 1 and 2 clearly state that Scripture is not scientific (we agree here) and then points 3 - 6 interpret Scripture as if it were useful for modern day scientific inquiry into origins science. You can't have it both ways! It either is or isn't scientific.
I'd like you to clarify why you clearly state that Scripture isn't scientific and then read it as if it is.
The bible is clearly pre-enlightenment. To read pre-enlightenment text with the view to study origins science is to force it into a post-enlightenment framework. It just doesn't work. It generates supposed contradictions that would never exist if we just acknowledge the bible for what it is, rather than what it isn't.
#2 - your views on what science is
- Science is not a synonym for truth, and scientific does not mean indisputably validated.
- Scientific does not equal real. I think that's your biggest problem. You don't understand exactly what science is and you lack an understanding of its limitations.
- For example, science tells us that a man who has been dead for three days cannot return to life.
- Science tells us that there are no demons and there is no demonic possession,
- You state this repeatedly by interjecting "science" as if it were a synonym for "truth." Science studies the physical word, not the supernatural world.
- Evolution is a lie that serves the father of lies.
- Evolution claims that all life evolved on its own without any supernatural intervention, and that man is merely a more evolved species. That gives man no special value.
I will be very clear on my epistemology. I am not an empiricist nor an evidentialist. I am a classic foundationalist who accepts reformed epistemology. For example, I take belief in God to be properly basic.
With that in mind, I will clarify my view on science. Since science is limited to the natural world, it does not and cannot study the full scope of topics, and cannot study the metaphysical at all. Science is not an appropriate tool to make metaphysical discoveries, but it is an appropriate tool to make physical discoveries.
Science has no metaphysical position because that whole area of study is out of scope. That is, scientists qua scientists, cannot be atheistic or theistic. Evolution does not, therefore, have an opinion on the value of mankind, evolution cannot claim there is no supernatural power, science cannot tell us that miracles are impossible or that demons do not exist.
In this sense, science can make true statements about the physical world, and no statements about the metaphysical world.
This doesn't stop some atheist scientists from using science as a platform to make metaphysical claims. But when they do this, they are being philosophers, not scientists.
I understand what science is, despite your claim that I don't

.
Evolution is a foregone conclusion in science. But this makes no metaphysical claims. In relation to the bible, you said "It doesn't teach or affirm the laws of physics." If the bible doesn't teach physics, and science makes no metaphysical claims, then how is it possible for the two to contradict?
#3 - your views on truth
- If the story is false then the argument is invalid.
- You state this repeatedly by interjecting "science" as if it were a synonym for "truth." Science studies the physical word, not the supernatural world.
- You accused him of using a teaching device based on a myth, while Luke taught as factually. It he was teaching a myth as fact, he must have been lying.
Here is where I believe you are still interpreting the bible as a post enlightenment text, failing to take into account the fact that it is pre-englightenment. Pre-enlightenment, stories were the primary vehicle of conveying truth. Pure conveyance of fact was not of primary essence pre-englightenment. But you are reading stories in the bible as a transmission of fact rather than a story that conveys fact. There is a big difference!
What I am doing is reading the stories for the fact they convey, and claiming that they convey truth. You are claiming that unless I read those stores as conveying fact (the literal sense) that I am claiming the stories are false. Unfortunately, it is not dichotomous like that. How can you justify that Luke taught a fact directly rather than conveying fact through story?
I could continue this debate with you, but it is pointless unless you address the differences listed above.