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God’s Judgment

For in judging your neighbor, you condemn yourself, because you practice what you judge.

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Therefore, you have no excuse, no matter who you are, if you can judge others. We know that God’s condemnation will justly come upon those who commit these acts,

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and do you think that by condemning others, you will escape God’s judgment, you who are doing the same?

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This would be taking advantage of God and his infinite goodness, patience, and understanding, and not recognizing that his goodness is meant to lead you to conversion.

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If your heart becomes hardened and you refuse to change, then you are storing up a great punishment for yourself on the day of judgment, when God will appear as the just judge.

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He will reward each person appropriately based on their deeds.

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He will grant everlasting life to those who seek glory, honor, and immortality, and who persevere in doing good.

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But anger and revenge will be the fate of those who do not serve the truth but rather injustice.

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There will be suffering and anguish for anyone who commits evil, first the Jew, then the Greek.

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But God will give glory, honor, and peace to everyone who does good, first the Jew, then the Greek,

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because everyone is equal before God.

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Those who sin without knowing the law will perish without the law; and those who sin knowing the law will be judged by that law.

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What makes us righteous before God is not just hearing the law, but obeying it.

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When non-Jews who don’t have the law naturally follow what the law commands, they are essentially creating their own law,

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showing that the commandments are written in their hearts. Their conscience also demonstrates this when they judge their actions as right or wrong.

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The same will happen on the day when God, according to my gospel, will judge people’s secret actions in the person of Jesus Christ.

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Jews and the Law

But suppose you call yourself a Jew: you have the law as your foundation and feel proud of your God.

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You know God’s will, and the law teaches you to distinguish what is better,

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and so you believe you are the guide for the blind, a light in darkness,

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a corrector of the foolish, and the instructor of the ignorant because you possess the true knowledge contained in the law.

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Well then, you who teach others, why don’t you teach yourself? If you say that one must not steal, why do you steal?

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You say one must not commit adultery, yet you do it! You say you hate idols, but you sneak into their temples!

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You feel proud of the law, but you do not obey it, and you dishonor your God.

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In fact, as scripture says, the other nations despise the name of God because of you.

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Circumcision benefits you only if you follow the law; but if you don’t, it is as if you weren’t circumcised.

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On the other hand, if those who are uncircumcised obey the commandments of the law, don’t you think that, despite being pagans, they are making themselves like the circumcised?

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The person who obeys the law without being physically circumcised will judge you—who are circumcised and live by the law—yet do not obey it.

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External appearances do not define a true Jew, nor is real circumcision simply the one marked on the body.

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A Jew must be so inwardly; the heart’s circumcision belongs to the spirit and not to a written law; he who lives this way will be praised not by people but by God.


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