I was just going to refute the idea that the two can co-exist, and was looking at Wikipedia to ensure that how I define "creationism" was indeed what others define it as... And I found out that I was incorrect! In fact, from my searching, I found that there is indeed a field of discipline known as "evolutionary creationism" or "theistic evolution" (see
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theistic_evolution). It essentially is the idea that God created life using evolution as the means for doing so. This idea came around during the tail end of the Age of Reason as a way to describe how humans were created by God without the necessity for miracles or other forms of spontaneous generation. And it sounds like some of the theories were the groundwork for Darwin's
Origin of the Species.
It's more or less what I believe, although in some ways, I feel that this area of study may still be too anthropocentric (humans being the central purpose for the universe) for my liking, namely when the article started going into hominization (or the process by which humans are produced) and it said that many versions of theistic evolution incorporate some type of "special creation" where God infuses the corporal human with a soul which truly distinguishes humans from lesser animals.
My beliefs are more along the lines of a less anthropocentric view of the universe. That when God created the universe and instituted evolution as a means to create a being in God's image and likeness, God didn't direct evolution to such a point that it would create
Homo Sapiens, but rather that evolution by itself was bound to create some being (not necessarily humans, and not just relegated to
only humans) that held characteristics similar to God such as an intellect, eye for beauty, compassion, etc. Thus it allows for aliens to also be created by God via an evolutionary path.
BTW, how I originally defined "creationism" was how BJohnsonPP defined it as "the doctrine that matter and all things were created, substantially as they now exist".... The problem that I have with that definition is that last clause "substantially as they now exist" meaning that each species was individually created as is (with certain differences like eye color or body size being insubstantial things that don't have a bearing on the development of the species). That there was no ancestral organism that other species emerged from. By this definition of "creationism", it would in fact mean that the differences between a chimp and a human are substantial enough that each would be created by God separately rather than having the two species evolve from some common ancestor. This is the view of "creationism" that I have a hard time accepting.