I am not a "Bible Believing Christian"
This once came up in a discussion, when I actually exclaimed that I really am not a "Bible Believing Christian". For the person I was telling, he seemed to take it as though I something along the lines of "I don't believe the bible as literally true, so I reinterpret it to suit my theological or philosophical fancy". Let me say now that the term "Bible Believing Christian" is quite the tautology and has been bastardized enough in protestant circles for gate keeping purposes. It may be personal trauma, but I simply dislike the term.
A Christian is someone who accepts and lives according to the Gospel of Jesus Christ, who was born, lived a human life, died, and was resurrected, as told in the New Testament. From evangelical protestants to Catholics, to Copts, to the Eastern Orthodox, to even the Arian Jehovah's Witnesses (Although they reject the term "Christian"), we all confess that gospel. If that's not "bible believing", I don't know what is. There are differences in how this Gospel is to be approached, but that is simply part of humanity's uncertain existence. These things are personal, and interpersonal, and that makes any sufficiently simple message is still complicated when applying to the shifting shapes of human lives.
The main reason I dislike talking about the bible's relation to the question of God is how many people think they know the bible. Many simply read several english translations and a couple of blog posts on some words in it and they think they know it. Trust me, you don't, you haven't even scratched the surface of the bible, or any scripture for that matter. It is a wonder to see the world of archaeology, hermeneutics, philology, and the various other fields that this ties to and realize you know nothing. Those who study it themselves do quite the work, and those with no expertise at all who simply read through scripture their entire lives still realize they know nothing. To read scripture is to enter a world beyond your categories, whether you believe that world is spiritual (for the religious), or simply the age the text was written (for the non religious).
Such is the nature of words that the meaning they convey is beyond the pages of the book, and in the case of various religious scriptures, the bible included, they're written and/or rewritten and compiled in a way that is meant to be exactly NOT STRAIGHTFORWARD. Most people don't know the ancient languages (I don't either, I can't use scripture in that manner because I'm not trained), but even in the english, you don't have the slightest idea what is going on most times. The intent of the writers and compilers' rendition of the text still (in many places) seeps through the translation, and studying it is a lifelong vocation. We Christians say the Spirit guides your reading, but even if you're not Christian (and if you are), your arrogance blinds you to the beauty of the text itself. We draw lines based on our interpretation. We think we know what it is saying. Well, you don't, you don't have a clue, so stop pretending.