Who's not talking about the subject: ability to obey God's laws as he requires?
Excuse me Clare.
We were discussing God's COVENANTS with man....
NOT whether or not we can obey as God requires.
You're trying to change the subject.
Again:
God made BILATERAL COVENANTS WITH MAN.
This means that GOD HAD A PART
and MAN HAD A PART.
There were blessings for obedience
and curses for disobedience.
IF God was offering both blessings AND curses,
it means that HE DID NOT do all the work...
man had a part.
Man could CHOOSE to obey or not obey.
Choice denotes free will.
This is the discussion at hand.
Only when the NT is absurd:
"No one will be declared righteous in his sight by observing the law.' (Romans 3:20)
"All who rely on observing the law are under a curse." (Galatians 3:10)
"A righteousness from God by faith (Romans 1:17), apart from the law, has been made known (Romans 3:20, Romans 3:28).
You're basing the ability to obey God in man's "free will,"
while Scripture denies man's ability to obey as God commands (Romans 3:20)
and bases his ability to obey God only in man's regeneration (true Israelite).
The issue there is not the choice, but the ability and inability to obey.
We are always responsible, even though we are not able (Romans 3:20).
I'm not getting into the discussion of whether or not we can obey or not obey.
Both are possible AND REQUIRE FREE WILL.
I'm saying that God made an agreement with man,
and gave man THE CHOICE to obey or not obey.
And, HOW are we responsible if we are not able?
WHY would God ask us to do something He KNOWS we are unable to do?
This is a strange God indeed !
Biblical free will is the power to voluntarily choose, without external force or constraint, what one prefers.
The issue is what "one prefers."
Unregenerate man prefers his own will over God's will, and that is what he chooses.
Only regeneration changes that, giving him to prefer Gods will, which he then freely and voluntarily chooses.
The issue is not what one prefers.
The issue is WHY does one prefer one option over another...
Because in all of Christianity, the individual person is free to make his own choice.
In reformed theology, God makes the choice for you.
He just makes you want what He wants, that's all.
Your choice is coerced by God.