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Christianity does offer free will.
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Hm. This is an issue that could be discussed at length.
Take the garden of eden bit. Eat anything, but not from that tree, for it is the tree of knowledge. Now, this is where free will comes in. Man had the chance to remain ignorant and blissful, or to eat the fruit of knowledge and go against God's will, right?
However, since man would be God's creation, he can be said to have designed man exactly as he wished, so if he instilled within him the drive for knowledge and ambition, that would be part of his design. Nothing is beyond a God, not even knowledge of the future. So the eating of the forbidden fruit as being choice would be a non-argument, since man's instinctual and logical drive has been predetermined by the same God that forbade him to use it. It's like saying that you have a choice to breathe or not breathe.
Following this line of thinking, a lot of JudeoChristian folklore legend could be reinspected to some pretty interesting results, but I'm no Gnostic, so I don't really care to go that far. God is a silly notion to begin with, as far as I'm concerned.