As usual I see a lot of broad brushing of the Bible.Context is key,people.
Actually I see more broad brushing of "Christianity" itself. Not all Christian denominations are the same or believe the same things. Not all Christians believe the Bible verbatim, that you need to believe that Jesus is God to receive salvation, or even that religion and science need to be mutually exclusive.
For example, being a Catholic we believe that the Bible is the
inspired word of God. This means that the Bible should be used as a guide for God's intent with us, but is not necessarily completely accurate or that we need to follow it word for word. After all, humans put the pen to the paper, and humans are fallible. Moreover many of the stories (esp. in the Old Testament) were originally passed thru oral tradition so, just as in a game of telephone where the original message gets distorted by the end of the chain, many of these stories were bound to have changed and evolved as it was passed from generation to generation. And who's to say that some human somewhere along the way came up with the story themselves and eventually got incorporated into a book of the Bible (esp. if the only argument is the circular argument that God dictated the Bible so it must be true).
Thus ideas like evolution, the big bang theory, etc. are perfectly acceptable for Catholics to believe in. The main idea behind the Book of Genesis is how the world was formed and what role humans play in this world. It is trying to describe why we exist. Those scientific theories describe how, but not the why. For example, science tells us that the speed of light is a constant, but not why it is so nor why the speed of light has the value that it actually has. Perhaps when God was designing the universe (even before the big bang) God set the speed of light knowing that that particular speed was necessary for the big bang to expand fast enough for galaxies to cool down enough to have planets to support life yet still not so fast that the gravitational pull of the objects in space could form galaxies and star systems to begin with. If anything, I think that many of the theories of science have strengthened some people's appreciation for God's creation. It is much more impressive to believe that God's omniscience allowed for the big bang and evolution to create humans rather than some "sky being" saying a magic word and POOF! humans come into existence.
I think both religion and science both try to discover the Truth. They attempt to answer all of those age-old questions: how the world formed, what our purpose in life is for, etc. And as logic and reasoning evolve, so to will these two disciplines evolve (albeit rather slowly sometimes).