God created the world out of nothing. Particles and energy were sent in all directions. God is the uncaused cause, the remote cause, of the laws of nature. In miracles He intervenes in nature by temporarily suspending the laws. The natural sciences deal with proximate causes. When an earthquake occcurs, it is explained in terms of tectonic plates, fault lines, or other proximate causes, but God is the remote cause. I believe that God is the remote cause of the origins of species. Theories (plural!) of evolution deal with the proximate causes.
The first chapters of Genesis are a profound theological reflection on the relationships between and among God, nature and humans.
The problem with imposing this model as a restriction on what God can and cannot do or as attempting to bolster confidence in views about what he actually did do is to forget that none of this actually does constrain God.
To claim God is a “remote cause” does not actually prevent him from parting waters, baking manna in the desert or walking in sandals. By the same token, it doesn’t constrain him from using nucleotide sugars as a means to express all of life’s forms into intelligible code so that humans are tasked with trying to decipher it to understand their own origins. If he can change water into wine, he can just as easily change inorganic material into a collection of functional proteins.
A scientist who wishes to claim water cannot under any circumstances become wine would be left clueless in terms of explaining the origin of the cup of wine in his hand. The option NOT open to him is to DENY that the wine IS really wine simply because he can’t explain how it came to be wine. Likewise, if there is no possible way for material causes to adequately explain the origin of life, the scientist would likewise have to admit ignorance, but going into denial is not an option there, either.
Theistic evolutionists might be correct that God has the means at his disposal to front-load all the creative possibilities inherent in matter. However, that does not mean God actually did so. He could have chosen, as a free act of will, to front-load genetic code with the proximate means to create all life, if HE so chose.
Neither does that entail it is beyond the possibility of science to grasp the mechanisms or determine beyond doubt that some form of intelligence was, indeed, required somewhere.
To claim, as IDvolution does, that genetic code can be shown to require intelligence by design does not entail some limitation on God. The fact that he did so does not mean he was restricted to that as the only means at his disposal, just as leading the Israelites out of Egypt COULD have been accomplished by traveling some other, perhaps more direct, route.
To say God is “remote” or the “Uncaused Cause” actually opens the field to what is possible for him, since anything - except, as Lewis points out, meaningless nonsense - is open to him. Being a remote cause “rules in” intelligent design as much as it “rules in” cosmic fine tuning. It “rules out,” neither.