I don't really think evolution needs God. Here is my understanding to the nature of TE:
A person believes in God. That is what T is.
But the person is also overwhelmed by evidences of evolution. However, this creates dilemmas to the traditional Christian faith (which is creation). In order to accommodate both faith and "fact", here comes the TE. So, to me, TE is a compromise of traditional faith because of modern "scientific facts".
Theistic evolution has nothing to do with science or faith, it has everything to do with philosophy. Darwinism has taken many shapes and transcended every academic discipline in Western philosophy. God is just an abstraction in Liberal Theology but the positive influence of religion in society and culture made it appealing. What makes it especially appealing are the seminaries, philanthropic activities and pulpits. Fundamentalism is pretty much a reaction to Liberal Theology and it takes the Bible literal as history and considers it inerrant, this was an apologetic (defense) against unrelenting attacks from skeptics and academic targeting of supernatural elements in Scripture.
What's God got to do with Theistic Evolution? Well he need not have anything to do with it at all, what they seek is to wrestle our religion away from us. Like any trend in Christianity there are Christians and unbelievers blending together. Secular philosophers long ago turned their naturalistic philosophy into psuedo-theology,
Hegal and
Tillich being the most blatant and obvious.
Revelation unveils our ultimate concern. Yet, the ground of revelation, for Tillich, is described as the "ground of being manifest in existence" (155). In terms of Christianity, "the ground of being is God" (156). Revelation mediates knowledge through human cognitive reason. The knowledge of revelation is the knowledge of God which must be described symbolically. The "Word of God" is a symbol for God revealing itself in Jesus as the Christ
Does that sound like the traditional theology of the Christian faith to you?
Theistic evolution is simply meant to persuade onlookers against a literal interpretation of Scripture. Just as with Fundamentalists, Catholics or other religious Christians what they believe has to be critically discerned. Notice the use of symbolism and the vague and nebulous definition of God. This is my primary concern with Theistic Evolution, there is no real difference between Theistic Evolution and Evolution as natural history. All I have ever seen them do is to attack creationists.
God may or may not be important to them as individuals but the underlying philosophy is essentially naturalistic. I honestly don't care if Theistic Evolutionists want to make abstractions of Christian theology until they start to undermine the Gospel which is one of the goals of Darwinism, to expunge all theistic reasoning from our consciousness.
Theistic Evolution is an attempt to retain theistic reasoning in such a way as not to come into conflict with evolution as natural history. I think it fails miserably and the reaction of Creationists and Evangelicals has been that it is just another form of liberal theology. They don't like it when I tell them this and I would really love to be proven wrong but they are not on here trying to persuade me of anything, they post on here as performers in a theater. They target the undecided and I'm just an obstacle in their way.
In the Christian faith philosophy is not important, rituals are deeply meaningful but not vital, religion itself is not the most important thing. Christianity is a relationship where you are called by God the Father to repentance and receiving Christ in the power of the Holy Spirit. You cannot have a relationship with an abstraction and when you make Adam a symbol or figure of speech it attacks the Gospel at it's foundation. I believe they are being led down the primrose path, I try to warn them not to trust these worldly philosophies and the modern mythology of evolution as natural history. They call this an argument from incredulity which is nothing more then a politically correct way of calling someone a fool.
Grace and peace,
Mark