Judgment is the process of weighing behavior or events against an accepted standard and assigning consequences or resolutions. In ancient legal, religious, and narrative contexts, judgment is not limited to punishment and can include vindication, correction, or the re-establishment of proper order and balance. Judgment scenes often appear in stories where authority is exercised to address disorder, injustice, or conflict. In the Hebrew Bible and related literature, judgment functions as a way to show how order is maintained and how responsibility is enforced over time, whether applied to individuals, communities, or nations.
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References
- Sigvartsen, Jan A., The Afterlife Views and the Use of the Tanakh in Support of the Resurrection Concept in the Literature of Second Temple Period Judaism: The Apocrypha and the Pseudepigrapha
- Tipvarakankoon, Wiriya, The Theme of Deception in the Book of Revelation: Bringing Early Christian and Contemporary Thai Cultures into Dialogue
- Spronk, Klaas, Beatific Afterlife in Ancient Israel and in the Ancient Near East
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