(Matt 23:23-24 WEB)23 “Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you tithe mint, dill, and cumin, and have left undone the weightier matters of the law: justice, mercy, and faith. But you ought to have done these, and not to have left the other undone. 24 You blind guides, who strain out a gnat, and swallow a camel!”
It was commonplace for the Rabbi’s to emphasise the importance of keeping even the least of the commandments. They would later decide that honouring your father and mother (Ex 20:12) was the greatest commandment and respect for a mother bird (Deut 22:6-7) was the least (Keener 1993, Matt 5:19). The former of these, the honouring of your parents, may well have provided the inspiration for this teaching on the Law (see Matt 5:13-20, outline), addressed, as it was, to the sons of God.
In these verses Jesus speaks of ‘the least of these commandments’ and so, as the Sermon was his teaching on the Ten Commandments, an alternative interpretation is possible. Of these Ten, the latter five might be considered subordinate to honouring God and honouring your parents. Thus, Jesus could have been referring to the five commandments upon which he was about to speak (see Matt 5:21-7:12, outline).
Jesus presents the teaching and practice of these ‘commandments’ as the way a person becomes great in the Kingdom (Matt 5:19). His comments are directed toward believers and France suggests the following as a reasonable paraphrase “a Christian who repudiates any part of the Old Testament is an inferior Christian; the consistent Christian will be guided by the Old Testament, and will teach others accordingly” (France 1995, 116).
The righteousness that the Pharisees and teachers assumed for themselves contrasts (by implication) with the greatness Jesus attributes to those who took account of the whole law (Matt 5:20). For the Pharisees, righteousness hinged on not transgressing the law and, if righteousness were purely a question of zeal, then theirs could not be faulted (cf Rom 10:1-2). However, despite that zeal, the Pharisees were pragmatic in their approach. As Bonhoeffer observes,
(Bonhoeffer 2001, 77) Nor were they unrealistically optimistic in this, for“the Pharisees never imagined that the law must be taught but not obeyed; they new their Bibles better than that! Their idea was a direct, literal and practical fulfilment of the commandment, their ideal was to model their behaviour exactly on the demands of the law.”
(Bonhoeffer 2001, 77)“they knew they could never realize that ideal, there was bound to be an excess which needed forgiveness of sins to cover it.”
Commentators generally supply their own suggestions concerning the basis of this greater righteousness that Christ expected. For Lloyd-Jones, “It is the principle, not the action only, that matters; it is what you think and desire, it is the state of your heart that is important,” (Lloyd-Jones 1962, 207). For Stott, it is heart-righteousness, of the sort that Jeremiah saw characterising the Messianic age (Jer 31:33; Stott 2003, 75). For France it was “a relationship of love and obedience to God which is more than literal observance of regulations” (France 1995, 116). For Bonhoeffer the disciples’ “righteousness could only take the form of obedience to the law” (Bonhoeffer 2001, 77), but Christ’s perfect obedience was counted as theirs by virtue of their commitment to him.
Amongst the authors cited, it is quite generally assumed that it was due to the Pharisees legalistic attitude that Jesus singled them out. However, as Stott notes, the Essene Qumran community took such legalistic transgression avoidance far further than the Pharisees (Stott 2003, 75). If a legalistic approach were indeed the problem, then why single out the Pharisees in preference to the Essenes. It is also something of an assumption that there were none amongst the Pharisees whose motivation was not a heartfelt desire to serve the Lord, when in fact many were zealous to do just that (cf. Rom 10:1-2), amongst them a certain Pharisee called Saul (Acts 22:3, Gal 1:14).
When Jesus commented on the Pharisees law keeping (Matt 23:23), it was not to condemn their practice but to highlight their hypocrisy. For whilst claiming to conform to the whole law, they were effectively ignoring some of its most significant, but arguably less rule based, parts.
Whilst the ‘greater righteousness’ of this passage may be understood in terms of motivation. It is also possible to view it in other ways. From a corporate perspective, the Pharisee’s were part of an unrighteous Israel that was rejecting Jesus (cf. Rom 10:3), so those who chose to remain part of their establishment, rather than joining the way of righteousness under Jesus tutorage, were automatically unrighteous. This failure to accept Jesus (i.e. their lack of righteousness) automatically excluded them from the Kingdom of Heaven. The Essenes had at least realised that the way forward for Israel lay with establishing the way in the wilderness, whilst the Pharisees were staunchly committed to working within the existing establishment. They were advocates of the old wineskin rather than the new.
For example, Vermes (2004, 355), sees in the passage’s triple reference to the Kingdom of Heaven an emphasis that Jesus’ advice, whilst it applied in the present, was only given in anticipation of the eschatological events that would usher in the Kingdom and then primarily to the ethical aspects of the law (Vermes 2004, 355).
. . . commentary continues with Matt 5:21-26 OutlineBonhoeffer, Deitrich. 2001. The Cost of Discipleship London:SCM.
France, R. T. 1995. The Gospel According to Matthew. In Tyndale New Testament Commentaries; ed. Leon Morris; Leicester:Inter-Varsity Press.
Keener, Craig S. 1993. The IVP Bible Background Commentary: New Testament. Dowers Grove, Illinois:InterVarsity Press.
Lloyd-Jones, D. Martyn. 1962. Studies in the Sermon on the Mount, 2 Volumes. London:Inter-Varsity Fellowship, ).
Stott, John Robert Walmsley. 2003. The Message of the Sermon on the Mount .ed. J. A. Motyer, J. R. W. Stott and D. Tidball (The Bible Speaks Today: New Testament Series; Leicester: InterVarsity Press.
Vermes, Geza. 2004. The Authentic Gospel of Jesus. London: Penguin.