The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints believe in Evolution
In 1982, the Episcopal Church passed a resolution to “affirm its belief in the glorious ability of God to
create in any manner, and in this affirmation reject the rigid dogmatism of the ‘Creationist’ movement.”
While the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America has not issued a definitive statement on evolution, it does contend that “God created the universe and all that is therein, only not necessarily in six 24-hour days, and that God actually may have used evolution in the process of creation.”
many Hindus today do not find their beliefs to be incompatible with the theory of evolution.
While the Koran teaches that Allah created human beings as they appear today, Islamic scholars and followers are divided on the theory of evolution. Theologically conservative Muslims who ascribe to literal interpretations of the Koran generally denounce the evolutionary argument for natural selection, whereas many theologically liberal Muslims believe that while man is divinely created, evolution is not necessarily incompatible with Islamic principles.
Jewish teachings generally do not find an inherent conflict between evolutionary theory and faith.
Are you a loser Lutheran?
The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod teaches that “the Genesis
account of Creation is true and factual, not merely a ‘myth’ or ‘story’ made up to explain the origin of all things.” The church rejects evolution or any theory that “denies or limits the work of creation as taught in Scripture.”
In 1969, the Presbyterian Church’s governing body amended its previous position on evolution, which was originally drafted in the 19th century, to affirm that evolution and the Bible do not contradict each other.
Or a loser Baptist? In 1982, the Southern Baptist Convention issued a resolution rejecting the theory of evolution
The United Church of Christ finds evolutionary theory and Christian faith to be compatible, embracing evolution as a means “to see our faith in a new way.”
In 2008, the church’s highest legislative body passed a resolution saying that “science’s descriptions of cosmological, geological, and biological evolution are not in conflict with [the church’s] theology.” Moreover, the church states that “many apparent scientific references in [the] Bible … are intended to be metaphorical [and] were included to help understand the religious principles, but not to teach science.”