One problem that will always remain in discussing, defending or attacking "Christianity" is what exactly is being attacked, defended or discussed. I ultimately mean Orthodox Christianity, and only include denominational Christians to the extent to which they line up with Orthodoxy. Where they depart I may well agree with the non-Christians against what is under discussion. But for the sake of what we have in common, I will tend to stand with other Christians.
Avatar wrote:
1) But
they think it's
your calculations that are wrong.
2) And if you're in favour of examining it to be sure it's true, you surely don't worry about the "threat" from atheism, do you?
3) As for your suggestion that peace is not the aim, I believe you're right.

And it's appearance as a by-product will only be when everybody
else is dead.

Doesn't the bible say that next time he will come with a sword?
--A
On #1, of course - the question is one of who is right. And here you have to establish first principles that we DO agree on before you can move on to what we do not agree on.
On #2 - you need to distinguish between an honest examination of faith vs the lack thereof, which truth can only welcome) and attacks on one or the other that evade that honest examination but ONLY insist on one's own view and ideas. (One may have honestly examined and rejected opposing views, but this is not always clear, and very frequently what one side rejects is not what the other side claims.)
On #3, as far as universal peace on earth, of course you are right. In addition, the "sword" really means opposition on all levels, right down to the family level.
However, wherever Christianity is established and genuinely practiced it really does bring peace. Here again you need to distinguish between genuine practice of faith and things done in the name of faith without genuine practice.
I'd say these folks are fringe. The problem is I've personally seen thousands of them. Extrapolate my experiences are we get into millions over the whole of the country.
To KS: First of all, I'd refer to my point at the beginning of this post. Christianity is not one monolithic entity, even if the Christian Church is.
Our personal experience, however broad it may seem to us, is really just a drop in the bucket against an entire world over 2,000 years. IOW, if we go only by our own personal experience we risk being merely "a child of our time", limited, even truncated in vision as to what exactly this thing called Christianity is, where did these thousands that you did see come from, is this really what Christ and the Apostles intended, etc etc. In short, that you may have broad experience with fanatical and unreasonable Christians is no proof that there is not a reasonable and practical Christian faith that really is what Christ worked for, if you will.
Secondly, the specific question of special creation vs evolution is simply not an issue that can shake Christianity - it is not a question that ultimately puts Christianity under question. We would say that it is not "salvific". A great many intelligent Christians, scientists as well as lay people accept evolution as a reasonable theory and quite possibly the truth - my own priest, among others. So any use of the issue to attack Christianity as a whole is a waste of time.
"Eh? Two views? There are a dozen views about everything until you know the answer. Then there's never more than one." Bill Hingest ("That Hideous Strength" by C.S. Lewis)
"These are the days when the Christian is expected to praise every creed except his own." G.K. Chesterton