Back the Paleolithic when I was taking my first courses in Comparative Religious Studies at university, one of my professors mentioned that "righteousness" in the Bible meant something along the lines of "to be in the right relationship to God". In that sense of "righteousness", would you say that living righteously is valuable in and of itself, regardless of whether or not it leads to some reward, such as material gain or spiritual salvation? Why or why not?
Nice question.
The more I think about it the more complicated the answer becomes.
I could say on one hand
"yes", because the reward for righteousness is the natural consequence of being righteous (using the above definitions for that). The reward gained is merely the effect of being righteous. But I could say
"no" because having righteousness
is the reward for being righteous...
To crib a bit of Ghizali's
Alchemy of Happiness, it's like a doctor telling you to do "this or that" to gain a positive effect on your health. Following the advice given and gaining the positive effect is not a reward given by the doctor for obeying him, but is merely the natural consequence of following that doctor's advice. And neglecting the advice and not getting the positive effect is not the doctor inflicting punishment against you.
So overall I'm not sure whether or not this question can be properly answered, because the reward
is righteousness itself, so I don't think you can actually divorce the idea of
righteousness from the reward/consequence of
righteousness. It's sort of like asking "Is getting $20 beneficial even if you aren't getting $20??"