Showing 10 results for “judgment”
May we judge? How are we to judge? Judging
There are decisions that have to do with our daily vocation in our job in school etc. Decisions concerning our bodies in the matters of sex or drugs-should we follow the way of the world or no! And so we could go on. A decision is the formation of a judgment on a matter under consideration. Further
The key word here is "judgment." This word, both in the Old and New Testaments, in its noun, verb, and adjective cognates, has different meanings. If we limit ourselves to the New Testament (although the same is true of the Old), we discover that the word has primarily the meaning of "rendering judg
This judgment is God’s and not ours to make.
in judgment Thou shalt swear “the Lord lives” in judgment, i.e., one must never think of God’s name (His being and persons) abstractly, apart from His judgment, which is the only standard of right and wrong, and concerning which nothing is more awesome! Therefore, we must never us
There is a public judgment coming (vs. 10). God judges every day, every day we live in His presence. But there will be a public judgment, when all the public shall see what each one of us has done. Every secret of everyone’s life shall be manifest to everyone. Everyone shall be judged before the jud
This judgment, terrible and dreadful to the wicked and ungodly, is most desirable and comfortable to the elect. For He will judge us by the perfect law of liberty according to His imputed righteousness (Ps. 7:11; 135:14; II Chr. 6:23; James 2:12). Jesus, our Judge, shall confess our name before God
The idea of this judgment is that it shall be revealed for all to see that in Christ God has always been a righteous judge, daily rewarding good with good, and evil with evil. Every thought shall be revealed, every work shall be recounted, the things done in secret shall be bared for all to see. The
Although this type of judgment is very important in the lives of all Christians, even those who are Protestant Reformed, it is not my intent to focus on this aspect of judging. Rather, my intent is to expound on the second aspect of judging, the calling that all Christians have to make judgments in
So this convincing is not that of a gracious conviction meant to lead to confession of guilt and wrong, but that of an objective, legal conviction with a view to condemnation and judgment, and not a subjective sensing and inner realizing of the pronouncement of judgment. It is, rather, like the scat