For some reason the taxonomy of humans as part of the family of great apes, seems to annoy some theists quite a bit, who knows why. The histrionic on here by a few, when this fact is mentioned, is quite astonishing, though pretty amusing. Like theists who claim humans are not animals.
I think you understand. Christians and others teach that man is in a class by himself, like angels and the beasts. We are neither of those. Unlike the beasts, we are made in God's image. Unlike the beasts, we have a souls and an afterlife. Evolution strips the tree of life of that special status for man and makes him another beast that evolved from something nonhuman. "I ain't no monkey's uncle!"
Yet you couldn’t articulate what the Bible says on how a person is born again.
I'm sure he could, even if he didn't know, with a search of Google. He declined to do so for the same reason I often do. One has certain expectations of one interlocutor, and if they are not met, one loses interest in continuing. I'm often telling others at this juncture to think about what it is in it for the other person if you don't answer all of his non-rhetorical questions, and don't comment on arguments made in response to claims whether by saying you agree, or offering a rebuttal, which is a specific kind of denial, one which makes the comment rebutted incorrect if the counterargument is correct.
As an example of dissent that is not rebuttal, I just was told by a theist that a passage I cited from Numbers as evidence in contradiction of his claim that his Bible condone abortion was not about abortion, but instead, about God's judgment. Do you see why that is not a rebuttal and fails to address my comment, which was a rebuttal? The difference is that if I am right about what the Bible contains and what those words mean, then he is wrong, whereas even if he is correct (and he is; yes, this is about God's judgement - of which fetuses should be aborted), I can be as well.
Anyway, it's an acquired skill that requires a willingness and the ability to engage in dialectic as I just described it, and most people lack the ability to focus on an argument and give a complete answer to it, but some are so far from that that, such as those who won't acknowledge one's questions much less show the respect of trying to answer them, one is apt to do what I do and just stop cooperating. As I said, what's in for him if he doesn't? It's worth your while to think about such things. They're respectful and forward-going in a discussion, whereas the alternative is disrespectful and a discussion killer.
You might like to go back and find out what questions he is referring to that went unanswered and correct that. My guess is that you would like to do your part but aren't really sure what that is.
you know the main message of the Bible
I do, but I bet you'd disagree. It's submit or be punished. You might say that the central message is that we were born in sin and that by the grace of a loving God we are saved, but I see that man must submit to God's will (anything else is sin) or face perdition. Isn't that the discussion theists have with us when they tell us that on Judgment Day, we skeptics will have no excuses, because we were warned? What is the message there? You were warned, you disobeyed, and now you will be punished. THAT'S the central message of Christianity. One way remember? Just one way. But to be on that train, you need to comply with commandments.
What organism started everything, what is all life’s common ancestor? The next question is how impossible it would be to get from this organism to life as we have it today, this is what I see here. This would take great faith and wishful thinking.
We don't know the LUCA and likely never will. It was monocellular, marine, and likely an Archaean (a sort of primitive bacterium). But we don't expect to find fossils of it or any other permanent record, nor to recreate it in a lab and know that we have created LUCA, nor to have any means to decide if it was the LUCA or one of its ancestors
No faith is needed to say that there is strong evidence that genetic variants subjected to natural selection over geological time gave us the tree of life we see around us today and the extinct forms we find in the earth. That is extremely likely to be correct.
what is the point is the life that the Genesis story describes is all that can be confirmed by evolutionary theory.
Evolutionary theory like Big Bang cosmology contradicts Genesis. They can't both be right.
Notice how they mention origin of life (abiogenesis) and how even Evolution 101 uses this language yet you keep saying they aren’t related.
They can be considered separately, like all other types of evolution that came before (material and chemical) and since (psychological and cultural) biological evolution. One needn't have a complete theory of any of these to investigate any other. Abiogenesis (chemical evolution) preceded biological evolution, but divine creation works just as well.
This is subjective interpretation that isn’t proven, you can fill in the blank family tree. There is common design by the Creator.
So his comment is just unproven speculation, but your claim is not?