What on earth are you talking about? How is not a matter of free will when you feel God is leading you to a decision? Remember when God told Moses that he would lead the people, and Moses replied by saying "But Lord, I am not eloquent?" He was trying to get out of it with everything he could think of! I cannot for the life of me understand what is to be gained by the examples of the saints and all the holy people throughout the history of our faith if God's wanting to use us for a specific purpose means that we have no free will. I pray I am misunderstanding you, Seekingsolace, because that makes no sense to me whatsoever.
And this leads us to another question: Many people of the Evangelical persuasion (as well as some Roman Catholics) are quick to receive messages from *God, and accept being "convicted" (to use the popular Evangelical term) in such matters as they present their behavior as being out of their hands, a matter of direct revelation or otherwise divine provenance. Remember when a certain president claimed to have talked to *God prior to the invasion of Iraq which would go on to completely destroy a 2,000 year old Christian community, probably permanently. Now I'm not going to tell people that the messages that they claim to have received were false (though I personally believe them to be, and never put any stock in things like the Fatima apparitions or the Sacred Heart revelation when I was Roman Catholic), but I do have to wonder, since this is not an Evangelical or Roman Catholic board, so such things ought not be indicative of the mindset around here, how the Eastern Orthodox who have supported this woman in this thread or elsewhere feel about these kinds of justifications given for the behavior of Mrs. Davis and similar people. Do any of you feel at least slightly uncomfortable with *God telling her to behave as she has in this case, when in other contexts *God most likely tells her with equal conviction and authority that any number of foundational parts of the faith as you yourselves understand it as Eastern Orthodox people are quite simply wrong, demonic, pagan, 'unbiblical', etc.? On a broader level, does it not give you pause that your own fathers more often show the example of shying away from such direct contact with the divine, as they are spiritually trained to expect such thoughts and messages and not accept them uncritically (as Evangelicals seem to do), but instead be on guard for what may in fact be temptations from the devil?
(* may not actually be God)