{
  "id": "dict_003058",
  "term": "Judgment",
  "slug": "judgment",
  "letter": "J",
  "entry_type": "doctrine",
  "entry_family": "doctrine",
  "tier": 2,
  "aliases": [
    "Judgments"
  ],
  "short_definition": "Judgment is God's righteous evaluation and verdict over people and deeds.",
  "simple_one_line": "In Christian theology, Judgment means God's righteous evaluation and verdict over people and deeds.",
  "tooltip_text": "God's righteous evaluation and verdict.",
  "lede_intro": "Judgment is a doctrinal category that should be defined from the passages that establish it, located within the biblical storyline, and stated with clear theological limits.",
  "at_a_glance_definition": "Judgment is God's righteous evaluation and verdict over people and deeds. This doctrine should be read from the passages that establish it and kept distinct from nearby theological claims.",
  "at_a_glance_key_points": [
    "Judgment should be defined from the biblical texts that establish it rather than from slogan-level shorthand alone.",
    "It belongs within the larger witness of Scripture and the history of redemption, so related doctrines must be distinguished carefully.",
    "A sound account states what this doctrine affirms, what it does not require, and why it matters for the church's teaching, worship, and discipleship."
  ],
  "description_academic_short": "Judgment is God's righteous evaluation and verdict over people and deeds. As a doctrine, it should be stated from the passages that establish it and distinguished carefully from adjacent theological claims.",
  "description_academic_full": "Judgment is God's righteous evaluation and verdict over people and deeds. This doctrine should be defined from the passages that establish it, located within the larger storyline of Scripture, and stated with care in relation to nearby doctrines. Responsible use clarifies what the term affirms, what limits belong to it, and why it matters for the church's teaching, worship, and discipleship.",
  "background_biblical_context": "Judgment belongs to Scripture's teaching on the last things and should be read within the prophets, the teaching of Jesus, and the apostolic witness rather than from one disputed passage. Its background lies in prophetic expectation, resurrection hope, the day of the Lord, Christ's victory, and the already/not-yet shape of the age to come, all of which prevent the doctrine from being reduced to one disputed text.",
  "background_historical_context": "Historically, discussion of Judgment was carried forward through exegesis, preaching, controversy, and dogmatic reflection as Christian interpreters tried to locate the term within the biblical storyline and the church's confession. Patristic writers, medieval scholastics, Reformation divines, and modern theologians all gave the category different emphasis, which is why its historical use is broader than any one school or controversy.",
  "background_jewish_ancient_context": null,
  "key_texts_primary": [
    "Dan. 12:2",
    "Matt. 25:31-46",
    "Mark 9:43-48",
    "John 5:28-29",
    "Rev. 20:11-15"
  ],
  "key_texts_secondary": [
    "Isa. 66:22-24",
    "Luke 16:19-31",
    "2 Thess. 1:5-10",
    "Heb. 9:27"
  ],
  "original_language_note": null,
  "original_language_terms": [],
  "theological_significance": "Judgment matters because doctrinal precision in this area protects the church’s speech about God, the gospel, the church, or the last things and helps prevent distortions that spill into neighboring doctrines.",
  "philosophical_explanation": "At the philosophical level, Judgment raises questions about teleology, historical sequence, and the shape of Christian hope. The main questions concern literal and figurative language, personal and corporate destiny, and how future realities norm present faithfulness without encouraging speculative system-building. Used well, the category restrains both imaginative excess and flattened literalism.",
  "interpretive_cautions": "Do not use Judgment as a catch-all doctrinal label that settles questions the relevant texts still require you to argue carefully. Separate what Scripture clearly affirms about judgment, resurrection, kingdom, or consummation from speculative timelines, symbolic overloading, or attempts to read current events directly back into prophetic language. State the doctrine at the level of what Scripture and responsible historical theology can warrant, and name secondary disputes as secondary rather than turning them into tests the text itself does not impose.",
  "major_views_note": "Judgment has a broadly shared doctrinal center, but traditions differ over its precise definition, theological location, and practical implications. The main disagreements center on chronology, fulfillment, and genre-sensitive interpretation, not on whether God will finally vindicate His word.",
  "doctrinal_boundaries": "Judgment must be governed by the Bible's teaching on resurrection, judgment, kingdom, and consummation, not by speculative chronology or sensational harmonization. It should resist turning symbolic texts into overconfident timelines or using future hope to bypass present holiness, endurance, and mission. It must preserve bodily resurrection rather than reducing hope to a metaphor for spiritual survival. Used rightly, Judgment guards hope, judgment, and renewal without making one apocalyptic scheme the measure of all orthodoxy.",
  "practical_significance": "Practically, Judgment matters in daily ministry because what the church confesses here will eventually shape worship, hope, and obedience. It helps pastors frame death, perseverance, tribulation, and final restoration with biblical sobriety instead of speculation or fear-driven sensationalism. In practice, that adds urgency to repentance, evangelism, and sober pastoral warning.",
  "related_entries": [],
  "see_also": [],
  "meta_description": "Judgment is God's righteous evaluation and verdict over people and deeds.",
  "jsonld_description": "Judgment is God's righteous evaluation and verdict over people and deeds. This doctrine should be defined from the passages that establish it, located within the larger storyline of Scripture, and stated with care in relation to nearby doctrines. Responsible use clarifies what the term affirms, what limits belong to it, and why it matters for the church's teaching, worship, and discipleship.",
  "source_basis": "scripture-led synthesis",
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