Conway Morris is an interesting example, as he does write more popular books, which speculate about various ideas, e.g. convergent evolution, and of course he is a Christian. However, he is famous for his work on the Burgess Shale, (a rich fossil field in Canada), and it seems very unlikely to me that he used in his palaeontological work any reference to God. Hmm, these fossils are a bit mixed up, I wonder why God allowed that? Or did God sort these animals into phyla or was it the devil?
wiggi
Interesting your mentioning the Burgess Shale. This was of course the subject of a fine book by Stephen Jay Gould, who has come into some shtick, because his views have been erroneously misappropriated by the Creationists (aided and abetted by the egregious Michael Behe). The Burgess Shale seems to display a wide variety of phyla which no longer exist, (and indeed only a few of the modern phyla are represented in the Burgess Shale). The complexity and apparent rapid appearance of such phyla have seemed a gift to creationists, despite Gould's vehement opposition to such ideas.
The so-called 'Cambrian Explosion' seemed an even bigger gift to those who insisted on a literal interpretation of Genesis, and the finding of many pre-Cambrian fossils has done little to stem the mudslide of 'Creation Science'.
Has Conway Morris done his best to oppose such ant-evolutionary views as the above? I haven't read him, but from what you say, he sounds as though he's trying to give life to Bergson's old ideas of 'Creative Evolution', which certainly made much of convergent evolution.