I thought that was implied in my statement.
No. You said "when he reached whatever arbitrary state that God deemed "sufficient" enough,..." i.e. you implied that humanity had to reach some state first to which God responded by initiating a relationship with human beings. I don't think any arbitrary state had to be reached. God's act is the prior act, not a responsive act.
Actually, Paul said sin entered the world, and through sin death. The cause of this was the sin of man, hence the sin of man brought death not only on man, but the world as a whole.
Agreed on the first sentence, but not on the second. Paul says death spread to all men. Not to men and animals. And even when he speaks of death spreading to all men, he adds that it is because all men sinned. IOW it was not Adam's sin alone that brought death to all men. It was also their (our) own.
This still doesn't derail the point I was trying to make, that guided evolution assumes a direction and goal in all evolutionary processes, whereas the core definition of evolution assumes a result that is the complete opposite. The moment you infer God as the cause it is no longer naturalism, this is self defeating to evolutionary theory.
I don't believe in naturalism and I don't think science is naturalistic in philosophy. Only in methodology.
So I think you misinterpret the core definition of evolution when you equate it with naturalism. There are two basic claims made in the science of evolution. One is that mutations give no evidence of guiding evolution in any one direction. In particular , mutations do not arise in response to any need a species may have to adapt to a new situation. Either the mutation already exists in the species or that adaptation does not happen. End of story.
The second claim is that selection responds only to immediate survival and reproductive challenges, not to possible future challenges.
I agree with these claims. I don't agree that they necessitate a philosophy of naturalism.
Neither rules out God's understanding of evolutionary process, his foreknowledge of things to come, and his acting in the present for a future purpose via evolutionary process in ways that are not detectable to science since any such act appears to be of a piece with "natural" evolution.
Basically I don't think you can draw a line between God's action and nature's action as you can between natural action and human action. Historically the antonym of "natural" was "artificial" i.e. "made by human skill".
Somehow we have shifted the focus from human artifice to supernatural action by a deity, so that "natural" is now opposed to "supernatural" instead of "artificial" and is held to mean "not the action of a deity".
The first meaning is intelligible and scientifically testable. The latter is neither. It is simply a philosophical position that eliminates God from his creation.