Hi Ruiz,
Nonetheless Peter does seem to indicate that Ananias had a real choice but made the wrong one and must now pay the consequence.
Clearly a tension passage.
That this is a mystery to us is something everyone can agree upon (I think).
However I don't know of any believer of any flavor that believes "Jesus' death was a mere chance" happenstance.
This issue is IMO more of one of human perception and how to relieve this seeming tension between God's sovereignty and man's apparent free will.
Personally I believe the real answer has to do with the fact that God is eternal, without beginning which we cannot relate to as we are without a point of reference here in this time continuum.
HankD
Hank
While the person had a real choice, God is Sovereign in that choice and therefore the choice he was going to make was a part of God's Sovereignty. He, in other words, was not going to choose the other options. He had a real choice, but that choice was set in God's sovereignty.
The tension comes, in my opinion, in trying to say more than the Bible. Some advocate libertine free-will or hyper-calvinism. Libertine Free-will says that man's decisions are sovereign and God allows a universal freedom to man. Thus, they would say that Ananias could have chosen any option even if it would thwart God's plan for the situation, or Pilate could have chosen to release Jesus and thwart God's plan for salvation. The Hyper-Calvinist says that there is no real choice in man. He says that man at all. Both are in error.
Calvinism says that while man makes a real and true choice, that real and true choice is subject to God's Sovereignty. He cannot choose what is outside of God's plan. In this case, Ananias had a real choice, but he was not going to choose, based upon God's Sovereignty, to hold back the money. Or Pilate had a real choice, but he was not going to choose to release Jesus.
Is there a tension? Yes! Yet, to advocate for a Libertine Freewill or hypercalvinism is dangerous. This is why historic Calvinism works. We recognize the mystery in all of this, but we do not deny God's Sovereignty in every situation nor do we deny that man chooses.