I don't have problem with evolution as long as there is a Creator who created everything and is driving the forces of evolution. If you however want to argue on evolution without a Creator then there is a problem, because something cannot come from nothing.
If evolution is change over time ,ok, if evolution is adaptation over time, ok, but evolution without an intelligent Creator behind it is simply nonsense.
That's the distinction between faith-based ideas and evidence-basied facts.
Belief that God is the driving force and Creative Agent and Source behind the material universe and its natural phenomenon is a position of faith.
There are scientists who believe this.
And there are scientists who don't believe this.
But both scientists are working with the same facts, the same data, and doing the same
science.
Science does not lead us to faith. That isn't a defect of science. There are lots of things--in fact, most things--don't lead us to faith. From a Christian faith-based view that isn't a problem, in fact, that's what we expect.
That's because traditional, historic Christian teaching holds that faith comes not by reason, but by supernatural grace. We can find this throughout the Epistle to the Romans for example, from the first chapter where Paul says that in spite of God's power on display throughout the created world, people don't acknowledge and recognize God--but instead do their own thing. Paul is more explicit in Romans 10, "How can they call on Him whom they have not heard? How can they hear if no one is sent to preach? ... So faith comes by hearing and hearing by the word".
Expecting science to address or incorporate religious teaching and claims of religious faith would be to do science wrongly. It would result in pseudo-science, because science is a particular discipline with a particular methodology: Science relies on a naturalistic methodology, as it addresses naturalistic phenomena of the observable world.
Shoe-horning religion into science would not only break science, it inevitably hurts religion as well.
This is why pseudo-science is not only a problem for science, it's also a problem for people of faith.
Even if evolution is true, it requires God. Because you need a universe in order to have biological evolution, and you need the laws of nature to be what they are to drive evolution and that requires a mind to keep them going in a direction. You cannot have this happening just spontaneously out of nothing.
And that's a religious or philosophical argument. But not a scientific one.
Theology is theology.
Science is science.
If someone tried to insist that that automobiles with internal combustion engines don't make any sense without God involved would not provide any deeper insight into how the internal combustion engine works.
-CryptoLutheran