I'm not sure where exactly you're jumping into the conversation, but why is "true randomness" as opposed to "divinely-guided randomness" needed in evolutionary processes? And for that matter, how can "true randomness" even exist (whatever that might mean) if there is an omniscient and omnipotent God?
I'm not really trying to jump in. I was just saying, divinely-guided randomness is a contradiction in terms.
I'm a little out of my depth here, but I've never imagined evolution as a random process. Mutations (random) happen constantly and almost never lead to evolution, however when the mutation conforms to the environmental needs of the species in which it has taken place then there is a possibility that mutation will stick and continue to exist in a somewhat diluted form in coming generations. It isn't as though randomly a mutation becomes permanent. The mutation must meet the needs of the species in which it happened, or at the very least not damage them. That isn't particularly random in my opinion.
It would be like if I had a door key. I went around trying it in every door possible. After trying a few million doors I put it in a lock and it works. I had been trying it randomly on every door, but the fact that it opened this particular door was not random...this is the door it fit.
Again, I'm out of my depth here, just wanted to clarify what I saw as a contradiction.