Oh dear. Such a wonderful concentration of misunderstandings.
1. Misrepresentation of the Nature of God
The Bible makes it clear that God is absolutely perfect (Matthew 5:48), holy (Isaiah 6:3), and all-powerful (Jeremiah 32:17). John 4:16, 1:5, and 1:1-2 says that God is love, light, and life. God's work is perfect (Deuteronomy 32:4).
Theistic evolution requires death, bloodshed, suffering, and imperfection from the beginning of time. The Bible makes it clear that originally, earth was a paradise. Not so according to theistic evolutionists. According to them, it was always a war zone.
And I can quote to you verses showing God changing His mind and dwelling in darkness. A lot of times what happens is YECs have an innate, sentimental, fuzzy pro-life feeling within which they believe that animal death is most probably wrong. Then they project these feelings onto God, believe that they feel the way they do because God inspires them to feel so through the Scripture, and wham - you have a conveniently heretical rebuttal of theistic evolution.
Very simply: if it is wrong for an animal to kill another, then it must be wrong for a human to kill an animal, and therefore wrong for God to kill an animal - and yet
that was precisely what God did to provide Adam and Eve with animal skins. (Note this was before God gave the permission to Noah to eat meat.) So did God sin? O_O
And, would God create a world that would fall apart in animal overpopulation if there was no Fall? Is overpopulation perfect? This is being discussed on the thread here on death before the fall.
2. God becomes a "God of the Gaps"
God is the Prime Cause of all things. This is made clear in 1 Corinthians 8:6. But theistic evolutionists don't need God to be the center of all things. Throughout time, He is just there, not at all crucial to life's formation and barely having done anything but get it started. In theistic evolution the only things God is credited with are the things that evolutionists have yet to explain.
Do you cast out the demon of smallpox nowadays? Why are there only "demons of cancer" and not "demons of tuberculosis"?

simply: we
all worship our own "God of the Gaps". We pray over cancer because we can't control it, unlike flu and smallpox and tuberculosis which we can ostensibly cure. Do you thank God for every breath? For every raindrop? For the concrete science has produced for your buildings?
The "God of the Gaps" is not theistic evolution's fault. It is a basic figment of human pride which we all have to combat to learn to find God's presence in every situation. Besides, YECs have an even worse version of "God of the Gaps": they believe that God intervened during the creative act and then
physically left the universe alone forever after that. You know how I know that? Because the moment you acknowledge that God may have intervened, you admit that your science is inadequate. So if YECs try to investigate scientifically, they are admitting also that they assume that God didn't intervene in whatever they're studying!
3. Denial of central Biblical teachings
The Bible is the infallible source of truth authored by God Himself (2 Timothy 3:16), with the Old Testament leading up to the New Testament (John 5:39). Here are four main reasons why the Genesis account should be taken literally.
-Biological, astronomical and anthropological facts throughout the Bible are given in the form of facts, not symbolic representations.
-In the Ten Commandments, God bases the six working days and one day of rest on the same timespan described in the creation account (Exodus 20:8-11).
-In the New Testament Jesus referred to the facts of the creation (e.g. Matthew 19:4-5).
-Nothing in the Bible indicates that the creation account should be understood in any other way than as a factual report.
Theistic evolutionists, in fact, undermine the Bible. In other words, they say, "If what the Bible says doesn't agree with what a person smarter than me says, it must not be literal [regardless of the person's faith and bias against the Bible]."
If one reduces the Genesis account to a myth, what should keep them from reducing the entire Bible to a myth? Do they conveniently pick and choose what they think is real, making a bible to suit themselves?
Take the word "myth" and clean it of all those uncomfortable connotations such as "lie", "untruth", "rumor", "scandal", "urban legend" and you will find that a myth can be as much the truth as a history. Some "facts" in the Bible include pi equals 3 and bats are birds. Not everything true has to be factual: if you can't imagine that, at least make space for those who can. The reason the ten commandments quotes and Jesus' sayings go like that is because they were said within the cultural context of the Jews to whom the creation story was a convenient and powerful way of codifying their interactions with the world,
whether or not it was an actual historical fact. If Jesus starts a parable by saying "There
was..." is He a liar because the story never happened?
4. Loss of the Way for finding God
The Bible says that man was completely ensnared by sin after Adam's fall (Romans 7:18-19). Only those who realize that they are sinful and lost will seek Jesus Christ who "came to save that which was lost." (Luke 19:10)
Evolution knows no sin in the biblical sense of missing one's purpose in relation to God. Sin is made unclear, open to interpretation, and meaningless. Many gray areas come up on the moral scale. The Holy Spirit clearly declares sin to be, well, sinful. It's black and white, right and wrong, good and evil. Evolutionists don't think that sin ever caused man to fall, it just happened without any real consequences. If sin is seen as a harmless evolutionary factor, then one has lost the key for finding God, which is not resolved by adding God to the evolutionary scenario.
5. The Doctrine of God's Incarnation is undermined
The incarnation of God through His son Jesus Christ is one of the basic teachings of the Bible. John 1:14 says that the Word was made flesh and dwelt among us. Christ Jesus was made in the likeness of men (Philippians 2:5-7).
The idea of evolution undermines this foundation of our salvation. Evolutionists Hoimar von Difurth talks about the incompatibility of Jesus' incarnation and evolutionary thought: "Consideration of evolution inevitably forces us to a critical review ... of Christian formulations. This clearly holds for the central Christian concept of the 'incarnation' of God ... "
6. The Biblical basis of Jesus' work for redemption is mythologized
The Bible teaches that Adam's sin was a real event and was the direct and sole cause of sin in the world in Romans 5:12.
Theistic evolution does not acknowledge Adam as the first man, and completely overrules Genesis 2:17, that Adam was created directly from the dust of the ground. But in Romans 5:16-18, the sinner Adam and the Savior Jesus are linked together. Any view that mythologizes Adam's sin undermines Jesus' sacrifice.
And of course, how convenient for YECs to ignore the significant proportion of TEs who can make room for a literal-historical Garden Fall. Since I'm one of those, these objections are invalid against me. I'll let others handle it.
7. Loss of Biblical chronology
The Bible provides us with a clear time-scale for history.
-The timescale cannot be extended indefinitely into the past, nor into the future. There is a well-defined beginning (Genesis 1:1) and there will be a moment when time will be no more (Matthew 24:14).
-The total duration of creation was SIX DAYS (Exodus 20:11).
-The age of the universe may be estimated by the genealogies recorded in the Bible. It cannot be calculated exactly, but it is clear that it is the order of several thousand years, not billions.
-Galatians 4:4 points out the most outstanding event in the world's history: "But when the fullness of the time was come, God sent forth His son." This happened about 2,000 years ago.
-The return of Christ in power and glory is the greatest expected future event.
Supporters of theistic evolution/progressive creation disregard the biblically given measures of time in favor of atheistic evolutionist time-scales for which there are no convincing physical grounds. This can lead to two errors:
1. Not all statements of the Bible are to be taken seriously.
2. Vigilance concerning the Second Coming of Jesus Christ may be lost.
If the Bible gives us a clear time-scale of history, why didn't it tell people when WWI and WWII, or the Reformation, or Sept/11, or the Dec 26 tsunami would happen? Aren't these important events too? And, theistic evolution doesn't assume that there is an infinite past and an infinite future. Theistic evolutionists who believe in the Big Bang believe that there was a definitive first moment into which the universe came into being by God's command through the Big Bang. And just because we are theistic evolutionists doesn't convince us in any way to abandon the idea of the Second Coming: you will find more
Orthodox Christians being opposed to the doctrine of the literal millenium.
And "no convincing physical grounds"? My goodness, the physical grounds are
exactly why we assume these time-scales!
8. Loss of Creation concepts
Certain essential creation concepts are taught clearly in the Bible, including:
-God created matter without using any available material. In other words, He created stuff from nothing.
-God created space and the earth first, then the atmosphere, then the seas and dry land, then the plants, then appointed the sun and moon to rule the day and night, then created the stars and planets (since they resemble stars at first glance God probably also meant the planets when He mentioned the stars). He then created the fish and the birds, the wild animals and "creeping things" (definitely reptiles like snakes and lizards and also possibly insects) IN THAT ORDER. This sequence conflicts with all ideas of "cosmic evolution" and the Big Bang.
Theistic evolution completely disregards the Bible. The theistic evolutionists say, "The world says it's not true, so it must not be true."
Saying that the main point of creation was to teach us all this stuff is like saying that the main point of the Prodigal Son is that we should throw feasts every time our children squander our inheritance and come home repentant! The
real creation concepts are:
- that God created the universe
- that everything in the universe, being created by God, is under His authority and dominion and subject to His will
- that everything we see, being the created by God, can never deserve to be elevated to His status and thus should never be worshiped. Since the stars and the birds and the sun and moon are created they should never be worshiped as creator(s).
- that God created the universe with inherent order. This is the foundation of science, that nature has underlying structure instead of being fundamentally acausal, non/anti-deterministic and chaotically random. (Actually, evolution is nothing compared to quantum physics.
That is the real threat to the Christian understanding of the world. There is a desperate need for the development of a Christian hermeneutic and interpretation towards quantum physics that will glorify God. But I digress.
- that God created the universe with purpose. This can be seen in the "tohu-bohu" face-off of themes in the Creation story, where
1st day: firmament created - 4th day: firmament filled with luminaries
2nd day: sky and water created - 5th day: sky and water filled with bird and fish
3rd day: land created - 6th day: land filled with beasts and man.
We do not lose
these concepts whether or not the Creation story is non-historical.
10. Missing the Purpose
No other historical book gives us so many valuable statements of purpose for man as in the Bible. Some examples:
1. Man is God's purpose in creation (Genesis 1:27-28)
2. Man is the purpose of God's plan of salvation (Isaiah 53:5).
3. Man is the purpose of the mission of God's Son (1 John 4:9).
4. We are the purpose of God's inheritance (Titus 3:7).
5. Heaven is our destination (1 Peter 1:4).
However, the very thought of man having any purpose is ridiculous to atheistic evolutionists. Theistic evolutionists basically try to reconcile purposefulness with non-purposefulness, which makes no sense.
The most direct way to refute this is to point out that many TEs still believe in the direct creation of man's soul. "Non-purposefulness"?