I would go so far as to say that belief in evolution may well be inescapable from a biblical viewpoint.
Consider this...
The bible speaks of God as being the "former of mountains"...
(Amos 4:13) . . .For, look! the Former of [the] mountains and the Creator of [the] wind, and the One telling to earthling man what his mental concern is, the One making dawn into obscurity, and the One treading on earth’s high places, Jehovah the God of armies is his name.. . .
And yet, we know that mountains are in a constant state of being formed. What is a flat desert plain today may well be a mountain at some point in the future. The Earth's crust is in a constant state of flux, and the formation of mountains is a continual process.
If this is true of mountains, why can't it also be true of life forms?
Furthermore, if we dogmatically state "God could not possibly use evolution as a tool in the creative process", wouldn't we be presumptuously robbing God of an essential element in his toolkit? Who are we to say what processes God doesn't use, especially if there is scientific evidence to suggest that he uses them?
Cedars