In addition to the first presidency statement and teachings from prophets and leaders the scriptures are pretty clear.
Unless one wants to dismiss scripture as myth, and not official doctrine, seems to me there are conflicts.
What FP message and/or scripture do you think precludes a TBM from accepting evolution?
On the other hand, the same creation account situates Adam and Eve as the primal parents of all mankind, thereby causing the faithful LDS to qualify either the degree to which s/he believes the scriptures, or the degree to which s/he believes the proponents of Darwinism.
There are several ways one could go here.
1. Homo Sapiens prior to Adam did not have spirits that were the literal children of God. Therefore, they don't qualify as 'mankind'.
2. Homo Sapiens not not macro-evolve but everything else does.
I happen to prefer the first one.
I believe, however, that the overwhelming majority of LDS, if they think about the question at all, tend towards qualifying their belief in evolution. Only in the bloggernacle do you see the phenomenon of dedicated Darwinists also claiming belief in LDS doctrine.
We took a show of hands in Gospel Doctrine recently during a heated debate on the issue. A little less than half accepted the evolution of man as not being in conflict with LDS doctrine.
According to evolution, my ancestors were on this planet 3 billion years ago and they swam in the ocean. How do you harmonize that, precisely?
Easily. 2 Nephi 2:22 shows that everything was created
into a state of no death. What about the creative state itself? Since there are no constraints (such as no death) on the creative state, evolution is possible.
I know several who hold the opinion that if one believes in evolution they do not have a true testimony of the LDS church and the plan of salvation.
As do I. But when you ask them to show how evolution is precluded, they can't do it. I accept the fall of man (BRM's main requirement) and I also accept evolution knowing that it does not conflict.