The Calvinist idea of inability is best described by one of my favorite Calvinists, Horatius Bonar:
"Remember that what you call your inability, God calls your guilt; and that inability is a willful thing. It was not put into you by God; for he made you with the full power of doing everything he tells you to do. You disobey and disbelieve willingly. No one forces you to do either. Your rejection of Christ is the free and deliberate choice of your own free will."
I don't know. Would you and
@Silverhair have a problem with the description above of our "inability"? It was a quote by an actual respected Calvinist, later than the Puritans, more around the time of Spurgeon.
When I say that, I say it in view of the definition of inability as put forth by Bonar above. So in other words, I am saying that a work of the Spirit is necessary on our will because our will and thus our choice is not to regard Christ and God's commands.
Your will is the problem, but it is your own true will and your own true guilt. God did nothing to you to cause this. I am already agreeing with you on your free and natural will. I am only saying that my (and the Calvinists) description of your own sovereign free will is the accurate one. Now I admit, that I read as much Calvinist literature as anyone and look, I fully understand how based on what some people say it appears the Calvinist position is that God had deliberately fixed us so we are functionally unable to respond to the gospel and then they insist we are still guilty of not responding. I don't believe that either.