No, I didn't. God did, I just believe him
You did. You don't know God's word. Muslims have a book too, and so do other religions. They all say the same thing. 'Our book/artifact is evidence of God's will'. What is your proof for being the one religion that's right, out of all religions? You don't have one.
What is the proof that any of these religions have it right? There isn't any. It's all faith.
In you article, you say Evolutionists have beliefs about God. They don't. Science doesn't make any supposition whatsoever about God (*). The premise for your article is false, but let's run thru another bit of it anyway:
'Glasses': What glasses? The only glasses 'evolutionists' look through is science. Science is logic, reason. Religion is faith. There's no common ground for these two optics to compare observations because one looks at the rational, empirical aspects, the other looks at the religious, supernatural aspects. What is there to compare?
Another thing, you say 'evolutionists' like it's some sort of breed of men. It's not. Evolution is a theory, an idea that's for the time being is the best fitting model to data. There's no other reason for any special relationship between the distribution of religion and scientific ideas in this population of people (people who harbor an idea of Darwinist Evolution as the best model of natural evolution), other than maybe some mistaken understanding that the two are mutualy exclusive.
The two ideas are independent.
I don't have the patience to read the rest of the article. The logical aberrance in your post is bad enough. You
believe science backs up the bible. You don't have proof. There's no scientific proof of anything supernatural, can you understand that?
* It doesn't say it exists, nor does it say that it doesn't exist. The people who Lazs says won't admit that there's something beyond science or that 'admit defeat' against religious ideas aren't representative of science.
In the first case, refusing to admit that there's something beyond science is not a matter of science, it's a matter of faith. That's not science talking when they say refuse to admit the possibility of something supernatural, that's faith.
Second, to admit defeat in front of religious ideas, you need a conflict. There's no such thing between:
The systematic study of the structure and behaviour of the physical world, especially by observing, measuring and experimenting, and the development of theories to describe the results of these activitiesand
The belief in and worship of a god or gods, or any such system of belief and worship.
Systematic study, and belief and worship. No conflict.