Christianity and evolution are not mutually exclusive
Wrong. They are, and it goes deeper than many people realize. The contradiction
is twofold, creationism vs. evolution on the one hand and christianity vs. evolution
on the other. Creationism claims the flora and fauna we see was created by some
god or other, whereas evolution shows (with overwhelming evidence) how higher forms
evolved from lower forms and how those best adapted to any given habitat will
prosper in that habitat, whereas the less well adapted will eventually die out
or adapt to a different habitat. There is of course the bootstrapping question of
how life in its most primitive form actually started, before evolution could kick
in. Some want to explain that with gods, which first of all is a pointless exercise
anyway since, as we already covered above, gods can't explain anthing (but merely
replace one unknown with another). It's furthermore another example of a typical wishy-washy
response of people cornered by facts yet unwilling to let go of make-beliefs they're
used to, which actually doesn't "slightly extend" the concept of evolution,
as proponents of intelligent design and similar nonsense would make you believe, but
makes a travesty out of the whole process. Evolution does a great job at explaining
the origin of species without having to resort to magical agents at any step along
the way, thus also neatly refuting all the religious nonsense trying to interpret
the variability of species as proof for the existence of god(s), so trying to make
it look like evolution was really founded on the myths it so splendidly debunked
belies a mind which hasn't understood evolution at all and is too cowardly to
openly oppose it; which, in its way, is actually worse then the dyed-in-the-wool
fanatics who take the Bible literally, because it doesn't so much oppose scientific
facts as pollute them.
"No problem," says the "modern" christian, "the Old Testament
is passé and I don't believe all that clay-and-ribs business, so there's nothing
to fear from evolution..." Well, no. There's another reason why christianity and
evolution are mutually exclusive, and that concerns christianity itself, namely its
allegedly unique virtue of love-thy-enemy it so loves to flaunt in everybody's face.
OK, in real-life terms there isn't all that much do be seen here, but it's still the
declared ideal, so how does that fit in with evolution? The answer is: not at all.
Evolution is about competition, both inter-species and intra-species, that's what
"survival of the fittest" means. Evolution would never produce a lasting species
which turns the other cheek (be it towards members of its own species or others), any
such uncompetitive aberration would quickly and unceremoniously be kicked out of the
race (i.e. die out). So it isn't just the Old Testament which is completely at odds
with evolution, but most of the New Testament as well, because their declared ideals
are diametrically opposites; you can't be for one without automatically opposing the
other. You want evolution in a nutshell? The meek shall not inherit the earth.