This is very well stated. I'll be interested to see if there is a response.
There would not have been a response had you not stated your agreement with this unbelievers comments. I feel no obligation to debate the nature of God with pagans nor even respond to their blathering. However, since you agree and seem to effectively count his post as your response I will gladly respond to it...
Then our righteousness cannot be said to be an act of volition on our part can it because we received the righteousness we have. You see the difference Clete?
Of course I see the difference! This was MY point! "Our righteousness" does not exist! It is Christ's righteousness which has been imputed to us. We did nothing, He did everything!
The point is that HE
DID SOMETHING!!!! How many times would you like for me to quote Romans 5:8? And it is that righteous act which makes it possible for God to justly declare us righteous. Without it, God could not do so and remain righteous Himself. No matter how many times you try you very simply will not succeed in divorcing God's righteousness from God's action. It is His decision (an act of the will) which makes Him righteous. Without choosing to act, His action has no virtue of any sort.
A righteous act proceeds from a righteous character that we have received from God.
This statement is true of us but only because we are born with a fallen nature and require God's life in order for our nature to be considered righteous but even before we are saved, we can act in the best interest of others and thus act, in that instance, righteously.
There are righteous acts but they cannot come from an unrighteous character. It is not simple doing an act that is perceived to be right it is being righteous that defines the act.
Not according to Jesus. See Luke 10:25-37
To help Knight see why I agree with e4e.
Jesus could only perform a righteous act because He is righteous.
"If ye know that he is righteous, ye know that every one that doeth righteousness is born of him."
Again this idea that no one with a fallen nature is capable of acts of righteousness is simply not Biblical. No one in the Old Testament had anything but a fallen nature and there are hundreds of actions throughout the Old Testament which God calls righteous and people whom He calls friends.
Further I think that you are losing sight of the fact that I am not simply talking about good deeds. It is the decision to act that makes the action righteous. That is to say that there is more than one kind of action. There are the outward deeds we perform but there are also the inward decisions we make and the attitudes we possess. It is these actions of the mind that define a persons character and which yield good deeds. In this sense all actions proceed from the inside out but the point is that they are all chosen actions and it is the quality of these choices that define the quality of a person's character.
Of course, I have no doubt that this will not have convinced you to change your position and so let me save us an iteration here and simply ask you again...
If it is not God's actions (whether in thought or deed) which makes Him righteous, then what does? How does one define righteousness apart from action?
Also, on that point, you said earlier that God was righteous before He had ever acted, or something along those lines. I was wondering when you thought that was? Has not God always been in perpetual relationship with the members of the Trinity? Has not God the Father always loved the Son and Spirit and acted in a way consistent with the nurturing of those relationships? When was the time before God acted righteously? There was no such time!
Resting in Him,
Clete
P.S. I don't know what exactly is going on over there at Wikipedia nor how the cite works and who is able to edit the articles contained therein but since this morning that article has been significantly edited and portions even made to say the opposite of what it said earlier today. I am removing the link from my earlier post. No wonder no one trusts that website!