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June 26, 2026

The Righteousness of God

Timothy J. Johnson   |   Read Romans 6:12-19

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Lectionary Week
June 22–28, 2026
Scripture Overview

From Genesis we learn of the righteousness of God and the untraversable chasm between God and humankind. Simultaneously, we learn of God’s grace and mercy as God intermittently crosses over into human experience as a guide and keeper for Abraham and his descendants. In the psalm, the faith of the psalmist is tutored by the righteousness of God. In the Gospel reading from Matthew, Jesus himself becomes a bridge of righteousness to and from God. And in the epistle to the Romans we learn of Jehovah’s eternal transaction. No longer prisoners of the flesh, we become emancipated to freedom in the righteousness of God.

Questions and Suggestions for Reflection

Read Genesis 22:1-14. What does it mean to be righteous? How does this scripture passage give you confidence in your faith in God when you find yourself in hard places of ethical and moral dilemmas?
Read Psalm 13. What does this psalm teach you about who God is and what prayer can and should be?
Read Romans 6:12-23. How does “fruit” serve as an appropriate metaphor for being righteous and for living out the Christian life? How do you experience God’s gift of eternal life in your everyday life?
Read Matthew 10:40-42. What are the characteristics of a righteous person? What is the reward of a righteous person?

Respond by posting a prayer.

Romans 6:12-19

12 So then, don’t let sin rule your body, so that you do what it wants. 13 Don’t offer parts of your body to sin, to be used as weapons to do wrong. Instead, present yourselves to God as people who have been brought back to life from the dead, and offer all the parts of your body to God to be used as weapons to do right. 14 Sin will have no power over you, because you aren’t under Law but under grace. 15 So what? Should we sin because we aren’t under Law but under grace? Absolutely not! 16 Don’t you know that if you offer yourselves to someone as obedient slaves, that you are slaves of the one whom you obey? That’s true whether you serve as slaves of sin, which leads to death, or as slaves of the kind of obedience that leads to righteousness. 17 But thank God that although you used to be slaves of sin, you gave wholehearted obedience to the teaching that was handed down to you, which provides a pattern. 18 Now that you have been set free from sin, you have become slaves of righteousness. 19 (I’m speaking with ordinary metaphors because of your limitations.) Once, you offered the parts of your body to be used as slaves to impurity and to lawless behavior that leads to still more lawless behavior. Now, you should present the parts of your body as slaves to righteousness, which makes your lives holy.

Unless otherwise indicated, scripture quotations are from the Common English Bible. Copyright © 2011 Common English Bible. Used by permission.

I love the hymns of the church. I think what I love most is that the melody is readily identifiable as the top note in the chord structure. Perhaps what makes some of the Paul’s writings so complex is that he uses huge doctrinal chord structures that have made him...

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Thank you, Lord, for choosing to enmesh us in your righteousness. Lead us. Teach us how to live out the glorious freedom that is ours as recipients of your righteousness. Amen.


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