Why or, in what way, does free will have everything to do with obeying God? Is not mere will enough? Why this notion, "Free"? What is the difference? What do you mean by, "Free"?
What is the will?
As traditionally conceived, the will is the faculty of choice or decision, by which we determine which actions we shall perform. As a faculty of decision, the will is naturally seen as the point at which we exercise our freedom of action – our control of how we act. It is within our control or up to us which actions we perform only because we have a capacity to decide which actions we shall perform, and it is up to us which such decisions we take. We exercise our freedom of action through freely taken decisions about how we shall act.
source: Will, the - Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy
In theology we use the term FREE WILL which is related to moral decisions.
We use the term FREE because there are some areas of theology which state that our will is not truly free, but is dependent on an outside source, or, actually, on coercion from this outside force.
This outside force would be God.
To show which WILL we are speaking of the terms LIBERTARIAN and COMPATIBLE free will are used.
Now, I'm not really here to discuss what words mean.
If a term is used, it means the person using it understands what it means.
Otherwise our conversation become useless, unless we use the same terms having the same meaning.
If
@Clare73 had said "born again", would it mean she's of the reformed faith? She claims no allegiance to the "Reformed Faith", whatever that means.
Those of the reformed faith use the term REGENERATE. They also believe regeneration precedes salvation - the opposite of what the rest of Christianity believes.
Your characterization of the Reformed is inaccurate.
Where is the inaccuracy?
They believe that God will indeed bring those he chose to finally be with him after their temporal life.
Exactly.
In the reformed faith, it is GOD that chooses who will have eternal life and who will be damned.
For whatever reason - we are not informed as to what the decision is based on.
The person, either chosen or not chosen, has no say in the decision.
You want to make it sound like some kind of 'automatic' thing. But the Reformed know, God is not mocked, and what we sow, we reap. You have the whole matter backwards. Our will has not been removed from us. We continue, as always, to choose according to our inclinations, just as God planned.
Correct. In Calvinism God planned what each person will choose at each moment of his life.
As Piper has stated, even the specks of dust in the air are controlled by God.
This type of choosing on our part is certainly mocking TO US.
It's called compatibilist free will.
It is not true free will, but man is made to choose according to what God wills.
Choosing according to our inclinations is a sweet way of saying it.
But it's not so sweet to man since his true free will has been eradicated by a God that chooses everything for him.
There is no value in the extra word, "free", unless by it you are talking about freedom in Christ or something of that nature.
If instead, you mean no causation to your choices, then you are wrong. Everything is caused, except first cause.
It would be nice to clear up whether or not you adhere to all the beliefs of calvinism,
or if you just pick and choose which ones you like and then expect others to know your choices.