TheGreatEscape said:
It is addressed to saints who were chosen in love before the foundations of the world. No where in the text is faith a prerequisite or future faith a prerequisite on the part of man in the text.
And that is the way it is qualified in verses 3-15.
Again, the problem you have is that to make the narrow argument, you are saying it's only the Ephesians at that moment who were chosen. Or you have to take a broader stance that everybody who hears the letter is chosen, which always expands it to the point where you would essentially be arguing that everybody who simply heard this letter was chosen.
Additionally, we can look at the lineage of Jesus in Matthew 1 to see that God has a chosen people, Israel, and yet when we look at the women who are specifically called out, we see the grafting of other groups (Canaanites and Moabites for example) into the lineage of God.
Further, we of course know that through Jesus Christ, the gentiles, who were once "excluded" are now included in his chosen people.
So what we are left with is saying that the chosen people are those who hear the Word of God (everyone) and do not resist (less than everyone).
But to make the claim that Paul is saying God is actively excluding people in the beginning of this letter doesn't hold.