(Sorry 'bout the huge post
)
We've probably seen this poll from Gallup already:
What's interesting about this is the sudden shift towards the end. In general Creationism has always correlated with atheistic evolution - when one went down, the other went up. Theistic evolution always remained roughly the same. In 2011 however something changes: theistic evolution goes down, Creationism goes up, atheistic evolution remains roughly the same.
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Presuming this is the start of a trend (rather than just a statistical blip), why is Creationism more appealing to Christians than theistic evolution? I'm begining to think it's because we're better at defending evolution than we are at defending our religion. I don't go on TE websites very often but the few I have seen are not very good:
This basically justifies the atheist argument that science proves (or at least indicates) there is no God - and doesn't sound all too different from the YEC argument God put down fossils to test our faith.
Here God is described - at best - as a kind of neglectful father. He set limits on creation (which He knew would go wrong) and abandoned the world shortly after He created it. But it's not His fault of course. Once again this is an argument I sometimes hear from YECs, but didn't expect from from TEs.
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TL;DR: Should theistic evolutonists do a better job at defending our religion?
We've probably seen this poll from Gallup already:

What's interesting about this is the sudden shift towards the end. In general Creationism has always correlated with atheistic evolution - when one went down, the other went up. Theistic evolution always remained roughly the same. In 2011 however something changes: theistic evolution goes down, Creationism goes up, atheistic evolution remains roughly the same.
-----------------------------------------------
Presuming this is the start of a trend (rather than just a statistical blip), why is Creationism more appealing to Christians than theistic evolution? I'm begining to think it's because we're better at defending evolution than we are at defending our religion. I don't go on TE websites very often but the few I have seen are not very good:
God created mankind with free will. He did this for a very specific reason. If God wanted to, he could have created mankind to worship Him, and forced them to do so. But God did not want an army full of slaves. God wanted people in heaven who would choose to worship Him. Therefore, they must have the option not to worship Him.
In order to give people this option, God needed to have some form of plausible deniability. Mankind had to have the ability not to attribute the creation of the world to a supreme being. An old earth, with an alternative to believe in naturalistic evolution, gives mankind an option for plausible deniability of a creator.
In order to give people this option, God needed to have some form of plausible deniability. Mankind had to have the ability not to attribute the creation of the world to a supreme being. An old earth, with an alternative to believe in naturalistic evolution, gives mankind an option for plausible deniability of a creator.
- Oldearth.org
Francisco Ayala, an ex-Dominican priest and an ex-Catholic, claims that Darwinism poses no challenge to religion because it frees God from responsibility for the cruelties that pervade the world. Then he warns that those who oppose Darwinism may be guilty of blasphemy by imputing the worlds incompetent design to God, instead of to unguided evolution.
...
Howard Van Till, who abandoned Christianity after retiring from Calvin College, makes an argument that is now practically universal among theistic evolutionists: He contends that on the grounds of a theological aesthetic it would be distasteful for God to act directly in nature after the initial creation. Richards counters that this view contradicts the Bible, which clearly shows that God makes covenants with men, performs miracles, and becomes incarnate. Another case revealing how corrosive Darwinism is to Christian faith is that of evangelical Denis Lamou­reux, who embraces what he calls evolutionary intelligent design: He says God initially created an arrangement of matter that would unfold deterministically ever after, without any need for His guidance. He objects to intelligent design theory because it implies that God could have played a role in the history of the universe and mankind, something he ridicules as interventionist design theory.
...
Howard Van Till, who abandoned Christianity after retiring from Calvin College, makes an argument that is now practically universal among theistic evolutionists: He contends that on the grounds of a theological aesthetic it would be distasteful for God to act directly in nature after the initial creation. Richards counters that this view contradicts the Bible, which clearly shows that God makes covenants with men, performs miracles, and becomes incarnate. Another case revealing how corrosive Darwinism is to Christian faith is that of evangelical Denis Lamou­reux, who embraces what he calls evolutionary intelligent design: He says God initially created an arrangement of matter that would unfold deterministically ever after, without any need for His guidance. He objects to intelligent design theory because it implies that God could have played a role in the history of the universe and mankind, something he ridicules as interventionist design theory.
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TL;DR: Should theistic evolutonists do a better job at defending our religion?