In fact, I reject creationism altogether. I do believe God did it and I believe He used evolution. Back in DoM's time and before, there were indeed some spats. But all the Church put out was a reiteration of doctrine, the meager details of which don't conflict with evolution in any way.
I suppose this is technical, but "creationism" also refers to the belief that God created "man", regardless of where, when, how.
It does. But it also includes a literal six day creative period and a creation of man out of clay.
The internal contradictions of this "open" view have been addressed by thinkers like Roberts and Nibley, who proposed "pre-Adamites", but this could not solve the problem, scripturally based, that death came into the world only after the time of Adam.
I believe I have solved this problem by pointing out that there are no details given (such a "no death") for the creative period.
The archaeological record affirms that death has been in the world since Darwin's mud pond. Millions of species have lived and become extinct prior to 4,000 BC. The Dinosaurs "ruled the earth" for 65 million years. All before Adam.
Agreed.
None of this fits the idea that Adam was the "first flesh" upon the earth.
The context could be the first flesh that was finished being created or some other things as well.
But we could make Adam four billion years old. That could solve it.
It is true we don't know how long Adam was in the garden, but my thinking goes like this....
-Homo sapiens evolved 10's or hundreds of thousands of years before Adam.
-Their spirits were not initially literal spirit children of God. Perhaps animal spirits of some sort.
-When all was ready, the Lord took a homo sapiens and put a spirit child within (at conception/birth) and placed him in the garden into a state of no death.
-After Adam fell, evolution proceeds apace.
-The interruption in evolution can be imperceptibly short.
The advantages are obvious. Creation and evolution are as science discovers. The fall can be much closer to the traditional time frame. Having different (lesser) spirits within helps explain why homo sapiens has been around for hundreds of thousands of years and yet only relatively recently has exploded civilization-wise.
And Noah placed Dinosaur eggs on board the Ark, because otherwise they wouldn't fit. And post-flood, where did they end up? As Australian kangaroos! They look like dinosaurs to me.
I prefer a local flood hypothesis. Dinosaurs died out 65 million years ago.