If you don't believe the entirely of the Bible, where do you draw the line? You cannot pick and choose which parts of the Bible are infallible and which aren't.
Okay, I understand the logic of your argument here, but please take the time to consider what I'm about to propose to you. As believers in God, we believe that truth finds it's reality in Him. When one says that a particular book or individual accurately reflects God, it must be absolutely perfect in every way (the book or individual). Truth, if it is truth, cannot change- it is absolute. The bible is a book of individual stories written by men who experienced God and wrote about those experiences. Those stories were combined into one book during the council of Nicene. To demand that this book be absolutely perfect in every way is to give a divine authority to book which is only deserving to God alone. It is a demand that unnecessarily and unintentionally forces one to believe that it is in itself "God". The danger of this position is that when a believer sees that the bible is inconsistent, they think that their faith was in vain. The foundation of their faith in God was not in God himself, but in a book which they believed must be inerrant if God is to be real. And to any honest seeker of truth, one will eventually come to the realization that there are theological and philosophical positions, not to mention grammatical errors, that are in opposition to one another. For example; within the Old Testament the concepts of grace and unconditional love were a small voice against the teachings of judgement and revenge.. made concrete through teachings such as "an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth". The Jews had every right to stone the woman who had committed adultery (in the New Testament) under their law, yet Jesus taught us a different lesson; that grace and forgiveness is of a higher moral value than righteous punishment.
The Old Testament is filled with the slaughter of innocent men, women, and children in the pursuit of a home land, yet Jesus taught us to resist not evil and to turn the other cheek. It is for these reasons that the Jews said that he was blasphemous and put him to death. I consider myself a follower of Jesus, it is his teachings of God's unconditional love for his creation and grace that are the foundation of my faith. Whether Adam and Eve were real people or the demand that the bible be a perfect divine supernatural revelation is peripheral at best and should not be foundational to a Christian's faith. Those that make the demand that the bible must be divinely inerrant, are no different from Muslims who claim that the Quran is the divine, inerrant word of God... or Mormons that make the claim that the Book of Mormon is the perfect revelation from the angel Moroni. These claims are made because their truth is not strong enough to stand on its own spiritual merits and must claim miraculous transmission in order to gain validation. Unconditional love and grace need no supernatural validation. The philosophical weight of these two concepts stand on their own.
You made the point that we are not capable of picking and choosing what is truth and not truth out of scripture. What I am saying is that we are very capable of discerning the truth of love and grace, which has been revealed by men who experienced God through Jesus(the writers of the Bible). Those that demand the condition of Bible inerrancy have chosen to put their faith in a book. In doing so, they elevate it to Godhead, as apposed to allowing the book to lead them to the Spirit of God. The New Testament teaches us that we are to be led by Spirit, not legal code. The Spirit of God is what illuminates the words within it, not it's literal wording. I am not saying that the Old Testament is without benefit, just as Paul says to Timothy that it is inspired by God-useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness. Do you think the writings of C.S. Lewis are NOT inspired by God? are they useful for teaching? He, just like the authors of the bible, is a man who has experienced God and written down his experiences. Of course I do not believe that anything he has written is 'perfect' and I have, as I believe I should, a higher reverence towards the Bible than any other religious text. But to believe that the Bible is flawless is to almost believe that without it, we would have no way of knowing God through his Spirit.
Now, tjguitarz,
if you didn't read what I just wrote, please do, because it pertains a lot to what you're trying to figure out. First of all, the foundation of your faith should not be in regards to how we got to this Earth, but how we are to live while we are here. The evolution vs creationism debate can be food for thought but should in no way keep you from following the message of unconditional love and grace that Jesus taught us.
Sorry for the huge amount of thought, but if there's anything in this world worth pondering, I would argue that something along these lines is close to that. THANKS!