Not long after I became a Christian, I received my first Bible. As I read through it, I came across Matthew 5:20:
“ ‘For I say to you, that unless your righteousness exceeds the
righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, you will by no means enter
the kingdom of heaven’ ” (NKJV).
At that point in my life, I didn’t understand that there was a big
difference between God’s righteousness and my own. In other words, there
is a big difference between genuine righteousness and
self-righteousness.
When Jesus made this statement to the disciples, it definitely would
have had a bombshell effect. After all, who could measure up to a
standard like that?
The scribes had dedicated their lives to the study and interpretation
of Scripture. Many of the transcripts we have today can be traced back
to those scribes who faithfully guarded the Word that was given to
them. These were dedicated men. They knew the Bible.
The Pharisees were a set-apart people. Translated from the original
language, the very word “Pharisee” means “a separatist.” They would go
beyond the requirements of the law and add more to it. They would
quibble over the smallest legalistic point.
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Faith in the finished work of Jesus on the Cross Alone can save a man. |
Then along came Jesus. Unlike these religious leaders, His authority did not come from some leading rabbi. In those days, when a teacher of the law wanted to make a point, he
would say, “As Rabbi Hallel once said.... Therefore....” But Jesus
didn’t quote rabbis. He would even say, “You have heard that it was
said...but I say....”
Jesus did not have to quote another authority because He was the authority. He was God in human form.
Ironically, Jesus was accused a number of times of breaking the
Mosaic Law, specifically breaking the Sabbath. The truth is that Jesus
was the only One who kept the law perfectly. He never broke a single
commandment throughout His entire life. He never stepped out of harmony
with His Father, not even for a moment.
Yet the religious leaders accused Him, of all men, of
breaking the law. It was because they had twisted, misinterpreted, and
perverted the real message the law had come to give.
Jesus said, “I did not come to abolish the law of Moses or the writings of the prophets. No, I came to fulfill them” (Matthew 5:17
nlt). The word “fulfill” used in this verse could be translated as “to
carry it out, to make it full, to get to the heart of it.”
He lived by the law. As I mentioned, He obeyed it explicitly. He did everything the law pointed to.
Jesus was exposing the artificial righteousness of the religious
leaders. Their righteousness was an external masquerade. Their religion
was a dead ritual, not a living relationship. It never hit their
hearts. The irony is that it made them proud instead of humble.
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Christians are assured victory through faith in Christ. |
That is why Jesus saved His most scathing words not for tax
collectors or prostitutes, but for that Pharisees. They were interested
in actions instead of motives, doing rather than being, and details
rather than principles.
In Jeremiah 17:10,
God said, “I, the Lord, search the heart, I test the mind, even to
give every man according to his ways, according to the fruit of his
doings” (nkjv). God is still looking at the heart today. Instead of trying by our own efforts to somehow be righteous, we need to acknowledge that we are sinners separated from God.
He loved us so much that He sent His Son to die in our place, and now
has credited the righteousness of Christ to our spiritual account. As a
result, we have a righteousness that exceeds that of the scribes and
Pharisees, not because of what we have done, but because of what God has
done for us.
If we know anything of that righteousness, it should work its way
through our lives, and we should seek to be godly people. We can’t do it
on our own, but as Philippians 4:13 reminds us, we can do all things through Christ who strengthens us.
Written by #GregLaurie_OnePlace.com
Written by #GregLaurie_OnePlace.com
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