Thank you for bringing some sense to this thread. For a bit I thought I had lost sense of solid land and was sailin blind on the sea of crazy.Bringing the theory of evolution into a discussion about religion always brings about a heated debate. Evolution is, for me, an undeniable fact, whether you believe in it or not does change the fact that it has been proven, and can be observed by looking at fossils etc.
That being said, it is perfectly all right to question the finer details of the theory; questioning the world around us is a fundamental attitude upon which science rests, but I personally see no overwhelming evidence that points to us being completely off.
If you do not believe in evolution is fine, as long as you do not impose your beliefs upon those who do believe in the theory, and vice versa.
Another point that I would like to make, is that science and religion can co-exist. It's not black and white. You can take a little from both. In the end, science and religion are very similar. Both are the attempts of humans to understand the world in which we live.
What, in my eyes, defines a person is the values that he or she has, what he or she does, not whether he or she believes that God created the world in six days(?) or that man and apes are descendants of a common ancestor(s).
I'd say there are only two small points i would like to add.
1) disbelieving reality in the face of massive incontrovertible evidence does have reprocussions. In the USA where I live vacciene denial causes rhe needless DEATH of children, the immune compromised, and the elderly many of which would take vaccines but cannot because of medical reasons. There are many examples of how reality denial results in fatalities. It is a very serious matter.
2) you cannot hold on faith what is demonstratably false through evidence. This is reality denial. See above it causes death.
Thank you for your reply.