How much of the bible have you written?
I assume that's supposed to be how much have I read, correct? If so, then probably not enough to satisfy anyone here that I've read, well, enough.
I tend to read in chunks. At one point I would pray, pick a section, read it, and write about what I understood of my reading. Now I tend to read what others suggest, be it a Christian or non-Christian. But I always read the verses before I read any opinions of those verses so that I can try and come to my own conclusions. My assumption is that if God is going to lead me to an understanding of a particular verse then I shouldn't have any preconceived ideas going in.
The words written in the bible won't make sence unless you have faith in God and Jesus as your Savior. They are utter non-sence to unbelievers, you can only understand through faith. Are you ready to trust God?
I used to trust God, and the Bible made no sense. It makes more sense now that I read it as a non-Christian. To me it's now a book of moral lessons, much like fables. Before it was more like a history book which I just never could quite accept. Oh, I accepted the key parts that define Christianity - resurrection, devinity of Christ, etc. Just had trouble with some of the other parts. At the time I struggled with the idea of a boat big enough for all the animals (just an example) but had no problem with Jesus rising from the grave.
The problem I see with needing faith to understand the Bible is sort of a chicken and egg problem. You have to have faith for the Bible to make sense, but the Bible needs to make sense to strengthen your faith.
You figured it out, you have no free will, no choice at all.
Key - hit you on a bad day? And no, that really doesn't make me feel any better. A little worse actually because you've been so helpful.
Ok, back to the original question.
It doesn't matter if we're talking about picking the brown shoes when I get dressed tomorrow or walking to the front of the church next Sunday. God knows what these decisions will be. Whether it's something we are allowed to choose or something God chooses for us really doesn't matter to this discussion. He knows what what color shoes I'm going to pick tomorrow morning. So if it's already determined, where does free will fit in? If I was really free to choose the black shoes instead, then God didn't really know what would happen.
LilLamb - follow up question for you. How can you decide that lunch or shoe color is something too trivial for God to decide for us? Apologies if I'm putting words in your mouth, but that's how I understood what you wrote. Maybe by the decision to have pizza for lunch tomorrow you'll run into somebody you can witness to and God got you to the pizza place for a reason.