You are making faith conditional.
Very good. Yes, I am. Because the Bible makes faith conditional upon salvation.
Are you aware of Paul's answer to the jailer's question: "sirs, what MUST I DO to be saved?"
He answered, "believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you WILL BE SAVED."
Straight up. Salvation is conditioned upon faith.
This fact refutes the "U" in TULIP.
Are you really saying that the natural man, at enmity with God and dead in trespasses and sins, is in and by himself able to work up a saving faith?
No one "works up" any kind of faith. That is ridiculous. But calvinists have to come up with strange wordings in order to try to deflect from what the Bible says.
Have you ever "taken someone at their word"? Of course you have. Parents come to mind, for one.
Now, did you have to work up your faith in what your parents told you?
Do you see how silly that all sounds?
Christ was made a curse for His people so that they would receive the promise of the regenerating Spirit of God.
Actually, the Bible says that Christ died for everyone. So as long as you mean "everyone" when you said "his people" you are correct.
However, knowing calvinism and the view that Christ didn't die for everyone, could you please at least cite any verse that clearly indicates that He died ONLY for some?
The Spirit of regeneration precedes faith and produces faith as a FRUIT of salvation, and thus faith is not a condition of, or prerequisite to, salvation or justification.
This calvinist talking point is not found in Scripture.
Eph 2:5 -
made us alive with Christ even when we were dead in transgressions—
it is by grace you have been saved.
The red words at the beginning refer to regeneration or the new birth. The blue words at the end of the verse makes clear what the red words mean. IOW, being "made alive" and being "saved" are SYNONYMOUS. They go together. You can't have one without the other. I challenge you to find any verse where a saved person was not regenerated or a regenerated person was not saved.
And while you are at it, please fine any verse that makes clear that regeneration precedes or is required in order to be saved.
Now, Eph 2:8 - For
it is by grace you have been saved,
through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God—
First, notice that the blue phrase in v.8 is the EXACT SAME words at the end of v.5.
Second, notice the means of our salvation, which is THROUGH FAITH.
iow, faith MUST BE PRESENT in order to be saved. And since v.5 equates regeneration and salvation, v.8 proves that both salvation and regeneration ARE CONDITIONED on faith.
Clear as can be.
Instead, faith believes that Jesus Christ alone met ALL THE CONDITIONS for salvation.
This is true.
Faith is an immediate and inevitable FRUIT, or result, of regeneration
I just refuted this calvinist talking point.
and the instrument through which a believer receives the imputed righteousness of Jesus Christ and is justified.
Yes, and is regenerated when a person believes FIRST.
Luther and Calvin both taught that regeneration precedes faith. So did Whitefield, Edwards and others.
And they are just as wrong as anyone else who believes what they believe.
Eph 2:5 and 8 prove the opposite. Regeneration and salvation are THROUGH FAITH.
Calvinism has it backward; that faith is through regeneration and salvation. Yet, no Bible verse says this.