You didn't respond to what I said. I'll let you try again cause I'm nice. You say we must do something before we are born of God. We must by our own "will" have faith to be regenerate. So you are the one saying that. You guys are saying that we must have faith by our own will, so that's why I put "faith" beside of the will of man.
Show me a verse where faith doesn't come first.
Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved. Faith comes first.
Therefore, being justified by faith we have peace with God. Faith comes first
Call upon the name of the Lord, and thou shalt be saved. Faith comes first.
To him give all the prophets witness, that through his name whosoever believeth in him shall receive remission of sins. (Acts 10:43)
Faith comes first.
Literally every verse concerning salvation requires a person to have faith first. First there is faith, then there is salvation. It is salvation 101; soteriology 101.
Another fact: faith is not a work. I trusted that we all agreed on that point.
Therefore I am not "doing" anything but trusting Christ when I receive him as my Saviour. I am receiving by faith the gift of eternal life. My child does nothing when I give him a gift. He receives it and that is all. No work is involved. There is faith involved but not work. He receives it by faith.
That is the teaching in John 1:12--For as many
as received him to them gave he power to become the sons of God
even to them that believe on his name.
Which were born, not of blood, [not because you have a Christian family--it does not run in the blood or genes] nor of the will of the flesh, [not of the works that you do in the flesh--think of Abraham in Romans 4:1,2], nor of the will of man [not by reformation--by man's own will, him wanting to enter (nothing about faith here) Barnes states that it refers to a man's own human power, but not "faith", but of God. (John 1:13)
Faith is mentioned in verse 12. Why would the author contradict himself by redefining it in verse 13. Then the passage wouldn't make sense. Faith never comes before salvation/regeneration which both happen at the same time. That is one of the flaws of Calvinism.
Let me reiterate something I did not say. I did not, and never have said:
We must do something before we are born again.
That sir, is a blatant false accusation.