To judge is to discern what is true and just. If we assume God is omniscient, loving, and perfect (which I personally do) then he knows all the circumstances and intentions of every action. He knows not only the actions taken by a person, but also what the options available to the person were, what the person knew and believed, and what the desires of their heart were. Because of the atonement of his Son, he also has at his disposal the opportunity of mercy for those who repent of their sins, so he can be both just and merciful. In the atonement, the Son paid for the sins of all upon condition of their repentance and exercise of faith in Him.
Mortal judges can only try to emulate that judge. They are constrained by the mortal laws and their own limited knowledge and biases when it comes time to render judgement, thus God is greater than any mortal judge and will be their ultimate judge.
Additionally, God has the final say on all matters. No one can over rule God.
The plural form of the noun judge is judges.The plural possessive form is judges'.Example: All of the judges' attention was focused on the witness.
Judges are appointed to judge legal actions.
Short answer. Judges are most often lawyers before they become a judges.
There is an afterlife. or God judges a person after his or her death. or There is only one God.
The Roman judges were called "praetors".
I Like All The Judges For Different Reason's, But I Believe There Will Be Three New Judges This Year (2012)
Because Christians believeHe is the Creator of everything that was, is and to be in the future. To Christians, He is the omnipresent God who sees everything, every where all the time at the same time. He created all psychology. Only He knows why and how. Only He sees the history of everything everywhere all at the same time. AND remembers every detail of our hearts on why we do things or don't do things. Only God can search deep into our heart and know our real motivation for why we do or don't do. How could it be possible in all fairness and justice for anyone less than this capacity to possibly judge anything as far as eternal life goes?
The cycle (not the theme) of Judges is this: Israel rebels, God judges them through another nation, the people repent, and God raises up a deliverer, a judge. In this pattern there may be discerned a main theme: God's Faithfulness to His People. Now, it could be argued otherwise, but truly, God's faithfulness through His covenant is the reason why He remains Israel's God, and it shows the principle all throughout the book that as 1 John 1.9 says, "If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and cleanse us of all unrighteousness." This is a just, holy God, who hates sin, but who loves His people, and He always softens the hearts of His true people. We know that His love is not baseless, but had in view not the sacrifice of lambs and bulls, but of the Passover Lamb: Christ, and that is why He remained Israel's God, and why the righteous of Israel cried out to Him when in oppression, because of His covenant.
The plural form is judges; the plural possessive form is judges'.The judges' cars were vandalized in the courthouse parking lot.
It is our Creator Almighty God Who alone will judge all humans and jinns on theDay of Judgment.Catholic AnswerGod, Our Blessed Lord, Jesus Christ, is the One who will judge the living and the dead at the end of the world. He also judges each individual soul the instant it is dead. The former is called the General Judgment, the later is called the Particular Judgment.
God wants to see if we believe that Jesus is His Son. Which we should. God has forgiven you of your sins he forgives everyone as long as we ask him for forgiveness. When he judges us he will see if we really believe and if we do we will go to HEAVEN and if we do not we will go to hell and burn forever.
Whether the people during the time of the Judges recognized it or not God Jehovah was still in charge of the nation Israel. But it was a time of rebellion and as the book states, "In those days there was no king in Israel; everyone did what was right in his own eyes." Most of what they did was not in line with God's rules. When ever God raised up a new judge many of the people would fall in line once again, but would shortly forget all about God. This was a cycle lasting about 350 years, involving 14 judges.