Righteousness
- Our Sunday School education tends to teach us that Jesus
taught us to love one another, but this can lead us to the fallacious
conclusion that Jesus' opponents did not approve of such an ethic.
If one begins with the Synoptic Gospels, one's answer to the
question "What did Jesus teach?" is modified. Jesus
taught that "the Kingdom of Heaven , the Reign of God has
come upon you!" (Matt 12:28 par.). One of Israel's long
unfulfilled hopes shall be fulfilled or, better yet, is being
fulfilled. The problem for some members of Jesus' first audience
lay in how Jesus characterized that reign and its fulfillment.
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- If we look at the Lord's Prayer, we may find Jesus' teaching
in a nutshell:
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- Our Father in Heaven
- May your name be hallowed
- May your kingdom come
- May your will be done, as in heaven, so upon the earth
- Give use today the bread of tomorrow
- Forgive us our debts
- Herewith we forgive our debtors
- Do not let us fall victim to the test
- Deliver us from evil. (Matt 6:9-13)
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- Later manuscripts add: For thine is the kingdom, the power
and the glory, Amen.
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- Compare this to the Qaddish (Holy Prayer) from the ancient
synagogue service:
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- Let his great name be glorified and hallowed in the world
- he created in accord with his good pleasure
- And may he let his reign reign in your lifetime and in your
days and in the life time of the whole house of Israel,
- speedily and soon.
- And thereto say: Amen!
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- One aspect of the Kingdom of Heaven, consonant with Jewish
expectations, is that it would bring justice and its members
would be characterized by righteousness.
The Righteousness in the
Jewish Tradition
In the Old Testament righteousness (tsedeqah) is not
perfect moral uprightness but keeping of the covenant and maintaining
an obedient relationship to God. When the prophets speak of God's
righteousness, they refer to the following activities:
- Judging and lawgiving
Gracious, giving activity
Vindicating, giving prosperity or victory
Acting reliably, trustworthily, faithfully
Right speaking
God's relationship righteousness
Most of the time the word tsedeqah is applied to human
activity.
In the Christian polemic against Judaism, a number of Old Testament
concepts get confused and need to be separated by careful readers.
In Biblical thought and in Judaism election does not equal
righteousness and election does not equal salvation. It is possible
for a gentile to be righteous. In one Jewish tradition, the righteous
gentile is one who keeps the Noahid
commandments
- One should not practice idolatry within the land of Israel
- One should not blaspheme God
- One should not commit adultery
- One should not commit theft
- One should not commit murder
- One should obey the laws of the land in which one resides
- One should not eat flesh from a living animal
Many people impute to ancient Judaism the idea that it demanded
a sort of legalistic perfection in the observance of the law.
The Qumran community strove to observe God's ordinances perfectly
and called this righteousness, but they recognizes that few met
the mark and that salvation was God's gift. By acting according
to righteousness, they sought to show that they were accepting
that gift. See Benno Pryzbylski, Righteousness in Matthew and
His World of Thought (Cambridge University Press, 1980) p.
36. In the literature written by the Tannaim, the successors of
the Pharisee, we find a similar notion of righteousness. According
to Benno Pryzbylski, for the Tannaim "Righteousness is the
demand of God upon man; salvation, on the other hand, is the gift
of God for man. .. salvation is concerned with repentance and
atonement. It is not earned. Righteousness, in contrast, is earned.
By living according to the norm of righteousness (tsedeq)
the righteous one (tsaddiq) demonstrates that he want to
remain in relationship with God culminating with life in the world
to come. Righteousness is concerned with the maintenance of a
relationship based on the gift of God."
Righteousness in the Gospel
of Matthew
Matthew's Gospel focuses more upon the notion of righteous
than any other and so it becomes our main text for discussing
righteousness in the Kingdom of Heaven.
- In the Gospel of Matthew, after entering into the baptism
of John and calling his disciples, Jesus begins his public ministry
by giving the Sermon on the Mount. In that sermon, Jesus proclaims,
"Unless your righteousness exceeds that of the scribes and
Pharisees, you will never enter the Kingdom of Heaven" (Matt
5:20). What then is excessive righteousness? When we speak of
righteousness, we typically speak of receiving what is due to
us, fairness, or suffering the consequences of our actions. When
a convicted murder sits on death row, some people feel that justice
has not been done until that murder is executed. If our property
is damaged in an accident, some claim that they need repayment
for lost property or an injustice has been done them. But Jesus
teaches another vision of righteousness than that described above.
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- In the six antitheses of the Sermon on the Mount (Matt 5:21-48),
Jesus gives examples of what he means by excessive righteousness.
In all six, he contrasts how the law has been interpreted --
"You have heard that it was said to those of ancient times"
-- with his own interpretation -- "But I say unto you."
[Cf. David Daube, The New Testament and Rabbinic Judaism,
1956, p. 57]
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- The Antithesis Regarding
Murder (5:21-26) From Effect to Cause
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- In this antithesis, Jesus describes the law prohibiting murder
and extends it to anger. His jurisprudence calls for the righteous
to look to the cause of murder, anger, and then to treat all
acts that express that anger as acts of violence tantamount to
murder. Verbal abuse is then as much a violation of God's law
as physical abuse. The saying, "Sticks and stones may break
my bones, but names will never hurt me" is exposed as false.
One is called to be more circumspect about all of one's actions
and responsible for the harm done to others.
- In the second part of the antithesis, Jesus calls you to
be accountable to another's anger against you. "When you
are offering your gift at the altar, if you remember that your
brother or sister has something against you, leave your gift
there before the altar and go; first be reconciled to you brother
and sister, and then come and offer you gift." The implication
is that you cannot be reconciled to God if you have not first
atoned for your sins or offenses against others. In order to
be righteous by Jesus' standards, one must try to be aware of
any offense one might give. Our tendency to say "If my actions
bother someone else, that is his or her problem" is at odds
with Jesus' notion of righteousness.
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- The Antithesis on Adultery
(5:27-20)
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- Jesus radicalizes the law against adultery by calling for
the righteous to avoid lust. He applies a similar standard of
jurisprudence to the one above. Rather than looking at the act
of adultery, one looks to the root of that act. When we allow
our feelings of attraction to become conscious thoughts of desire,
we cross a line. While adultery is clearly a betrayal of marriage,
treating another person as a sexual object, or dwelling upon
sexual thoughts about another person other than our spouse is
deemed unacceptable for one who wishes to dwell in God's Kingdom.
The radical quality of this demand is even more apparent when
one sets it in its first century context. Adultery is the sin
of a wife not a husband. Jesus breaks with the conventional discourse
on sexuality by referring to a man's behavior. He does not accuse
women of causing men to have sexual impulses but rather insists
that men can control their own sexual urges. This idea is not
at odds with the Old Testament narratives, but it does not reflect
the habitual thought of Jesus' society and, in many respects,
our own society.
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- The Antithesis on Divorce
(5: 31-32) From the cause to the effect
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- In this antithesis, Jesus limits the grounds of divorce to
adultery. The Old Testament law sets very few restrictions upon
divorce (Exod 20:14; Deut 5:18). In this case, Jesus calls his
audience to think of the consequences of one's actions and states
that we are accountable for them. Divorce may not be a violation
of the law, but it may cause others do commit acts that are violations.
- Any reconstruction of Jesus' thought is speculation, but
it seems to be that the following may be part of what Jesus has
in mind. He is speaking about a man divorcing a woman: the law
does not provide for a woman to divorce a man. Given that marriage
is the only means for a woman within a patriarchal culture to
have status, a divorced woman is in an awkward and vulnerable
situation. The divorce may force her into another marriage. The
woman who has violated her marriage through adultery chooses
to commit this act of sin; the woman who seeks another relationship
because of divorce is forced into the act.
Jesus, therefore, places the responsibility for this act
upon the husband who has given the woman a divorce.
- If the above reconstruction is accurate, we can draw the
following analogy from our contemporary setting. The law allows
me to sell guns, but if I sell a gun to a person bent on revenge
and that person shoots another person, I am culpable for that
offense.
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- The Antithesis on Swearing
(5: 33-37)
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- Jesus prohibits swearing in this antithesis even though the
law enjoins one to swear oaths in God's name in court and with
regard to property disputes. Jesus is not speaking about the
use of expletives. Mennonites have taken Jesus' prohibition against
swearing seriously and do not take oaths. On the most basic level,
we can conclude that Jesus believes that honesty is essential
to righteousness: one should always mean what one says. I suspect
that Jesus is addressing a much more complicated issue about
language and meaning. He claims that distinctions between valid
oath formulae do not hold. Jesus lists some terms that many Jews
do not think are binding, that is they cannot be used in official
oaths. Heaven, earth, and Jerusalem are excluded because they
are not names for God. Jesus seems to be arguing that their capacity
to refer to God does not depend upon our conventions. Consequently,
he states all oath terms may be binding oath terms; therefore,
one should use none of them. When he states "do not swear
by your head, for you cannot make one hair white or black"
(5:36), he seems to be pointing out the limits of human speech
to define reality. We may think we know the truth and swear to
our convictions, but all of us make errors. We may swear that
we will do something in the future, but we sometimes cannot control
the circumstances that allow us to fulfill our promises. Consequently,
Jesus suggests that we never give our words such binding force.
For a longer treatment of this antithesis visit my paper on the
Goshen College Web Page: Jesus'
Prohibition Against Swearing and His Philosophy of Language .
This is definitely optional reading.
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- The Antithesis Regarding
Recompense (5: 38-42)
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- Walter Wink provides the following interpretation of this
pericope:
- "Indebtedness was the most serious social problem in
first century Palestine. Jesus' parables are full of debtors
struggling to salvage their lives. The situation was not, however,
a natural calamity that had overtaken the incompetent. It was
the direct consequence of Roman imperial policy. Emperors had
taxed the wealthy so vigorously to fund their wars that the rich
began seeking non-liquid investments to secure their wealth.
... It is in this context that Jesus speaks. His hearers are
the poor ("if any one would sue you"). They share a
rankling hatred for a system that subjects them to humiliation
by stripping them of their lands, their goods, finally even their
outer garments.
- Why then does Jesus counsel them to give over their inner
garment as well. This would mean stripping off all their clothing
and marching out of court stark naked! Put yourself in the debtor's
place, and imagine the chuckles this saying must have evoked.
There stands the creditor, beet-red with embarrassment, your
outer garment in he one hand, your underwear in the other. You
have suddenly turned the tables on him. You had no hope of winning
the trial; the law was entirely in his favor. But you have refused
to be humiliated, and at the same time you have registered a
stunning protest against a system that spawns such debt. You
have said in effect, "You want my robe? Here, take everything!
Now you've got all I have except my body. Is that what you'll
take next?"
- Nakedness was taboo in Judaism, and shame fell not on the
naked part, but on the person viewing or causing one's nakedness
(Gen 9:20-27). By stripping you have brought the creditor under
the same prohibition that led to the curse of Canaan. As you
parade into the street, your friends and neighbors, startled,
aghast, inquire what happened. You explain. They join your growing
procession, which now resembles a victory parade. The entire
system by which debtors are oppressed has been publicly unmasked.
The creditor is revealed to be not a "respectable"
moneylender but a party in the reduction of an entire social
class to landlessness and destitution. This unmasking is not
simply punitive, however; it offers the creditor a chance to
see, perhaps for the first time in his life, what his practices
cause, and to repent.
- ... Jesus' third example, the one about going the second
mile, is drawn from the very enlightened practice of limiting
the amount of forced labor that Roman soldiers could levy on
subject peoples. Jews would have seldom encountered legionnaires
except in time of war or insurrection. It would have been auxiliaries
who were headquartered in Judea, paid at half the rate of legionnaires
and rather a scruffy punch. In Galilee, Herod Antipas maintained
an army patterned after Rome's; presumably they also had the
right to impose labor. Mile markers were placed regularly beside
the highways. A soldier could impress a civilian to carry his
pack one mile only; to force the civilian to go farther carried
with it severe penalties under military law. In this way Rome
attempted to limit the anger of the occupied people and still
keep its armies on the move. Nevertheless, this levy was a bitter
reminder to the Jews that they were a subject people even in
the Promised Land. ...
- From a situation of servile impressment, you have once more
seized the initiative. You have taken back the power of choice.
The soldier is thrown off-balance by being deprived of the predictability
of your response. He has never dealt with such a problem before.
Now you have forced him into making a decision for which nothing
in his previous experience has prepared him. If he has enjoyed
feeling superior to the vanquished, he will not enjoy it today."
Walter Wink, Jesus' Third Way (Philadelphia: New Society,1987),
pp. 17-22
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- In the fifth antithesis -- one cited by Walter Wink with
whom I stand in disagreement -- Jesus addresses the law of "lex
talionis," an "eye for an eye; a tooth for a tooth"
(Exod 21:24; Lev 24:20; Deut 19:21). In the Second Temple interpretation
of this law, it is not about retribution but about the limits
of recompense, that is, how much one owes or should receive in
compensation for harm done. If someone knocks out my tooth, I
do not knock out his or her tooth. I ask for compensation for
the loss of the tooth, and my compensation should be no greater
than the value of the tooth. Jesus asks for the righteous to
give up the demand for recompense. If someone harms me, I should
not make them suffer in turn: "If anyone strikes you on
the right cheek, turn the other also." If the situation
is reversed and I have done someone harm and they seek recompense
by taking me to court, I should not limit the compensation to
the letter of the law but seek to give them more than the minimum:
"If anyone wants to sue you and take your coat, give your
cloak as well." In other word, if you pay what the law demands,
that is not righteousness, that is doing what the law requires.
Righteousness is doing more than the law requires. For example,
the law requires that you pay your taxes. Many expect that the
government should then take care of the poor and those in need
with those taxes. Jesus advocates paying one's taxes, but he
would not equate being law abiding with righteousness. Jesus'
notion of righteousness calls for a generosity that is excessive:
"Give to everyone who begs from you, and do not refuse anyone
who wants to borrow from you."
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- Walter Wink situates this passage in the context of oppression,
but one is hard pressed to find in the Gospel accounts of Jesus
much material that is concerned with the Roman occupation of
Judea and the Galilee. Jesus' words are directed to relationships
within one's community and with one's God. Moreover, Wink's analysis
presupposes that Jesus encourages us to shame others to conform
to our principles of justice and allows us to maintain our sense
of dignity. While the methods that Wink outlines in his book,
The Third Way, may be effective and necessary for people
who are suffering oppression, I do not think that they are methods
that Jesus recommends in the Sermon on the Mount. If we look
at Jesus' treatment of honor and shame -- a new question for
biblical scholars -- it seems that Jesus differentiates between
public honor and humiliation and the honor that we receive from
God. Jesus suggests that the latter is real and the former inconsequential."
Whenever you give alms, do not sound a trumpet before you, as
the hypocrites (over actors) do in the synagogues and in the
streets, so that they may be praised by others. Truly I tell
you, they have received their reward. But when you give alms,
do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing,
so that your alms may be done in secret; and your Father who
sees in secret with reward you" (Matt 6:2-4).
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- The Antithesis Regarding
Love of Enemies (5:43-47)
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- This antithesis begins with an interpretation of the law
that finds no citation in the Torah. In order to find scriptural
basis for hating one's enemies one must look to the psalms that
call for vengeance (eg. Ps 139:19-22). In this antithesis, Jesus
calls for the extension of acts of kindness and charity to those
beyond your own community, beyond those from whom one can expect
treatment in kind. Again, the accent falls upon giving to others
without the expectation that you will receive the same treatment.
We teach our children that in order to have friends, one must
be a friend. Jesus drops the first part of this adage and calls
us to be friends. Kindness is its own reward.
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- Jesus' notion of righteousness is then radical and extravagant,
As Ben F. Meyer writes, "The bursting of limits in the antitheses
correlates with the message of the herald of salvation ... his
proclamation of divine benevolence, boundless and on the brink
has a transforming impact on the person who accepts it."..."The
reign of God' signifies a revelation of extravagant goodness,
generosity appealing for generosity, depth calling depth into
being" (The Aims of Jesus, 1979, p. 144). The problem
with these commands is clearly the question of how to fulfill
them. Jesus does not provide a method, he simply presents the
demand, but an important corollary to the demand for perfection
stands God's own abundant forgiveness.
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