Johnny said:
Unless you can tell me which part of the theory of evolution makes any statement regarding the origin of first life, I'm going to have to call you disingenuous. So, the ball is in your court. Show me that I'm wrong. I will acknowledge my error. But first, you'll have to show me. I'd prefer a biology book of some sort. Again, the challenge is for you to show me which part of the theory of evolution makes any statement regarding the origin of first life or tell me why the validity or veracity of the postulations and implications of the theory hinge on the mechanism behind first life. Unless you can do this, you are wrong and dishonest to claim it so.
It wouldn't matter if I did find what you are suggesting is necessary, because if I did then you would simply say that this person did not understand evolution.
The reason I said what I did is because first life being generated "naturally" is a necessary starting condition for any scientific theory of evolution. This is by "implication", because it wouldn't be scientific to say that first life was caused supernaturally.
Whether you realize it or not Johnny, when people deny that God created first life they are on a road that may eventually cause them to lose their Christian faith.
This is the real threat of evolutionary belief. "Theistic evolution" is an unstable belief for a Christian, because to maintain it one has to "spiritualize" more and more of different parts of the Bible which are foundational to Christian doctrines and creeds.
At the end of this road are people like Bishop Spong, who now declare openly that the only part of the Apostle's Creed that he believes is that Jesus Christ died on the cross and was buried.
This is not Christianity.