How would you define "righteous"?
I have heard several ideas, so maybe that deserves addressing - if anything for those who may pass by exploring our faith.
I have read some describe "righteous" as perfectly obeying the Mosaic Law, perfectly obeying God's moral law (which I would assume is broader), and this attributed to us based on Christ's obedience.
I have also seen it described it by others in N.T. Wrights terms (as placed "in Christ", clothed in His righteousness, belonging to God's covenant people or "the elect").
And I have seen it described as an actual change, as God making us righteous (removing our old heart, giving us a new one, putting His Spirit in us).
I've probably ran into a few others, but I think you see what I mean. We need to decide what this means (declared, positional, ontological?).
I would define Righteousness like this:
(You changed my word from righteousness to righteous. I'll stick to what I said.)
"God's righteousness consists in his unswerving commitment to do what is right."
Since I a totally agree with John Piper in "The Future of Justification,"
and since he is my friend, I will quote him.
p63-64
"It is not very satisfying to say that God's righteousness is his commitment to do what is right, because it leaves the term 'right' undefined. We don't feel like we have gained very much in defining 'righteousness' if we use the word 'right' to define it. To be sure, it is not an insignificant thing to say to a child , 'God is the kind of person who always knows and loves and does what is right.' That is a wise and true thing to say. But someday that child is going to become a teenager and ask, 'How does God decide what is right? Who tells God what is right? Is there a book of laws or rules that God has to obey?'
Answering those questions gets at the deeper meaning of
righteousness. What is the 'right' to which God is unswervingly committed?
The answer is that there is no book of laws or rules that God consults to know what is right.
He wrote the book. What we find therefore in the Old Testament and in Paul is that God defines 'right' in terms of
himself. There is no other standard to consult that his own infinitely worthy being. Thus, what is right, most ultimately, is what upholds the value and honor of God-what esteems and honors God's glory.
The reasoning goes like this: The ultimate value in the universe is God- the whole panorama of all his perfections. Another name for this is God's holiness (viewed as the intrinsic and infinite worth of his perfect beauty) or God's glory (viewed as the out-streaming manifestation of that beauty). Therefore, 'right' must be ultimately defines in relation to the ultimate value, the holiness or the glory of God - this is the highest standard for 'right' in the universe. Therefore, what is right is what upholds in proper proportion the value of what is infinitely valuable, namely, God. 'Right' actions are those that flow from a proper esteem for God's glory and that uphold his glory as the most valuable reality there is. That means that the essence of the righteousness of God is his unwavering faithfulness to uphold the glory of his name. And human righteousness is the same: the unwavering faithfulness to uphold the glory of God."