20. For I say unto you, That except your righteousness shall exceed the
righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees--The superiority to the
Pharisaic righteousness here required is plainly in kind, not
degree; for all Scripture teaches that entrance into God's kingdom,
whether in its present or future stage, depends, not on the degree of
our excellence in anything, but solely on our having the character
itself which God demands. Our righteousness, then--if it is to contrast
with the outward and formal righteousness of the scribes and
Pharisees--must be inward, vital, spiritual. Some, indeed, of the
scribes and Pharisees themselves might have the very righteousness here
demanded; but our Lord is speaking, not of persons, but of the
system they represented and taught.
ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven--If this refer,
as in
Mt 5:19,
rather to the earthly stage of this kingdom, the meaning is that
without a righteousness exceeding that of the Pharisees, we cannot be
members of it at all, save in name. This was no new doctrine
(Ro 2:28, 29; 9:6;
Php 3:3).
But our Lord's teaching here stretches beyond the present scene, to
that everlasting stage of the kingdom, where without "purity of heart"
none "shall see God."
JFB.
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