Ezekiel 36:27 And I will put my spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes, and ye shall keep my judgments, and do them.
People who are intent on somehow placing their own free will into the picture insisting that they are good, don't understand the spirit that is given.
It is not our spirit. It is His Holy Spirit. So if your free will is in control then you are somehow able to command God to accomplish your will.
That is completely against scripture. God does not conform to our will. We conform to His.
All of a sudden obedience is something entirely different than what the legalists think it is. Obedience is resting from your own work and understanding and putting Faith in Gods Work in you.
Free will is independent of good or bad. It's simply the GOD-given authority to choose. Every man has it. Unregenerate man may choose of his own free will to want to do GOD's will, but he lacks the
ability to do so perfectly, if at all (Romans 7). Regenerate man receives the
ability to do the good that he wills to do (Romans 8).
Jesus told his disciples that they would receive that
ability to do GOD's will through the holy spirit. Men who have GOD's spirit are not bound by 'total depravity' to be slaves to sin.
But you will receive power [when] the Holy Spirit has come upon you, and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the farthest part of the earth.” Acts 1:8
Theological Dictionary of the New Testament
Power (δύναμις, dunamis)
Words of this stem all have the basic sense of ability or capability. dýnamai means a. “to be able” in a general sense, b. “to be able” with reference to the attitude that makes one able, hence sometimes “to will,” and c. (of things) “to be equivalent to,” “to count as,” “to signify.” dynatós means “one who has ability or power,” “one who is powerful”; the neuter adjective signifies “what is possible or practicable.” dynatéō means “to have great ability.” adýnatos means “one who has no ability or strength”; the noun tó adýnaton signifies “impossibility” and adýnatón esti “to be impossible.” adynatéō means “not to be able.” dýnamis, the most important word in the group, means “ability,” then “possibility,” then “power” both physical and intellectual or spiritual. dýnastēs has the sense of “one who can do something” and was early used for “ruler” (including God as ruler). dynamóō and endynamóō both mean “to give power,” “to make strong,” “to strengthen.”