The Resurrection and Final Judgment: Why the Risen Christ Will Judge the World

Resurrection and final judgment concept showing an empty tomb with light and a throne symbolizing Jesus Christ as judge with bold text “He Will Judge”

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The Resurrection and Final Judgment: Why the Risen Christ Will Judge the World

Author: Dave Jenkins

The resurrection of Jesus Christ stands at the center of the Christian faith. It is the foundation of our hope, the assurance of forgiveness, and the promise of eternal life for all who believe. Because Christ has been raised, death is defeated, sin is conquered, and the grave no longer has the final word.

Yet Scripture does not allow us to think about the resurrection only in terms of comfort.

The resurrection is not only the promise of life. It is also the guarantee of judgment. The same Christ who rose from the dead in power will return to judge the world in righteousness. This truth is not secondary. It is central to the message of the apostles and essential to a faithful understanding of the gospel.

From the beginning, the New Testament presents the resurrection as God’s public declaration concerning His Son. In Romans 1:4, Paul writes that Jesus was declared to be the Son of God in power by His resurrection from the dead. The resurrection is not merely a miracle. It is a declaration. God has spoken clearly about who Jesus is.

He is not simply a teacher or a moral example. He is the Son of God in power, the risen and reigning Lord.

This declaration carries unavoidable implications. If Jesus is the risen Son of God, then He possesses all authority. That authority includes the right to judge. The resurrection does not leave Christ in the past. It establishes Him as the One before whom every person will stand.

The apostle Paul makes this explicit when he tells his audience that God now commands all people everywhere to repent, because He has fixed a day on which He will judge the world in righteousness by the Man He has appointed, and He has given assurance of this by raising Him from the dead. The resurrection is the guarantee. It is the proof that judgment is certain.

History is not wandering aimlessly. It is moving toward that day.

This truth confronts the assumptions of our age. Many are willing to speak about spirituality or even about Jesus, so long as He remains detached from authority and accountability. The idea of judgment is often dismissed because it is uncomfortable. It challenges the belief that individuals can define truth for themselves and live without consequence.

But the Bible does not present a Jesus who can be reshaped according to human preference. The risen Christ is not only Savior. He is Judge.

The certainty of this judgment is emphasized throughout Scripture. It is appointed for man to die once, and after that comes judgment. Every person will stand before Christ. Every life will be examined. Every deed will be brought into the light. No one is exempt from this reality.

This removes any illusion of neutrality. There is no middle ground. The resurrection does not simply offer life. It also establishes a division.

Jesus teaches that a day is coming when all who are in the tombs will hear His voice and come out. Some will rise to life. Others will rise to judgment. The resurrection, therefore, is not only about hope. It is also about separation. It reveals that there are only two final destinies, and both are determined by one’s response to Christ.

This is why the message of the resurrection carries urgency. It is not enough to acknowledge that Jesus lived, died, and rose again. The question is whether we will respond rightly to Him. Scripture calls for repentance and faith. It calls us to turn from sin and to trust in Christ alone for salvation. It calls us to submit to Him not only as Savior, but as Lord.

To ignore this call is not a neutral act. It is a rejection of the authority of the risen Christ.

The resurrection assures us that Jesus lives. It also assures us that we will stand before Him. For those who trust in Christ, this is a source of deep comfort. The Judge is also the One who has borne their sin and secured their righteousness. There is no condemnation for those who are in Him.

But for those who remain in unbelief, the resurrection stands as a warning. The same power that raised Christ from the dead guarantees that judgment is coming and that it will be righteous and final.

The resurrection, then, demands that we see clearly. It calls us to move beyond vague spirituality and confront the reality of who Jesus is. He is the risen Lord. He is the appointed Judge. And He will return.

The question is not whether that day will come. The question is whether we are ready to meet Him.

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