As a seminary professor, I often began my classes by asking for students’ views of God. Without fail, the intensity of God’s judgment surfaced. Someone always asked, “If God is loving, why does He judge people so harshly?”
And it’s true, God’s judgment can be shocking. From Scripture, we know such events as a global flood, the destruction of the Canaanites, and the exile of Israel were all ordained by God Himself. My students’ conclusion was that the God of the Old Testament is a God of wrath. But it’s not just in the Old Testament that we see God’s judgment. It was important for them to understand that the greatest judgment is still future. In fact, every judgment they mentioned could be understood as a “mini-judgment,” anticipating this final judgment when God pours out his wrath against sin.
Revelation, the final book of the Bible, describes this ultimate judgment against evil. Revelation is full of striking scenes of weighty punishment—the four horsemen, the seven trumpets, and the many plagues. When we read these challenging chapters, we struggle to reconcile a loving God with one who judges people that He created. We are tempted to cast our own judgment by crying out, “How dare He do that? That is so wrong!”
But God’s actions are undeniable, printed in the pages of the Bible. So how should we process these events?
Before we cast God in the role of “angry punisher,” we should ask ourselves some questions.
Who is the judge behind the judgment?
When you hear the word “judgment,” what comes to mind? Maybe you picture a high-profile court case weighed by a jury. Or even a disapproving family member with impossibly high standards. In today’s environment, the word “judgment” carries some extremely negative connotations. We typically go out of our way to avoid being labeled as “judgmental.”
But the Bible does not cast us in the role of the ultimate judge. That position is reserved exclusively for God. So before we ask the question, “Why would God…?” we have to ask, “Who is God?”
Our understanding of God’s judgment must be grounded in the very attributes of who He is.
God is not a human jury, weighed down by preconceived notions or flexible standards. He is not the disapproving family member who judges others to elevate Himself. He is divinely perfect, free from the hindrances of our human failures.
Our understanding of God’s judgment must be grounded in the very attributes of who He is. An attribute is simply something that is true about God. From His Word, we know God is three-in-one, self-existent, immutable, infinite, eternal, self-sufficient, omniscient, wise, omnipresent, transcendent, faithful, good, just, merciful, gracious, loving, holy, and sovereign.
God is all of these and more, simultaneously, all the time. If we are truly seeking to understand God’s judgment, we have to unpack the character of the judge Himself. When we do, we can acknowledge that God’s judgment is God’s, not ours.
Is judgment really part of God’s character?
In exploring God’s character, we must separate God’s actions from His attributes. Judgment or wrath are not listed as attributes of God. They are not fundamental elements of God’s character. Instead, they are necessary responses born of His character. In the face of injustice, a just God casts judgment. Confronted by unholiness, a holy God responds.
God’s responses are never random. In His judgment, God remains fully faithful, merciful, gracious, and loving. He is fully God in every moment.
In Revelation, God’s judgment may feel extreme. The language is strikingly vivid.
But God’s extreme measures are in response to people’s extreme sin. Through John’s writing, we see people’s unwillingness to repent from their sin and turn to God. Faced with the wreckage of human sin, God responded.
In His judgment, God remains fully faithful, merciful, gracious, and loving.
True to His character, God delivered justice for all who come to Him. He remained consistent, doing what He said He would do. And through it all, He extended mercy to the undeserving. It states in Revelation 9:20 that “the rest of mankind…did not repent” and “did not stop worshiping demons.” Throughout Revelation, God gave these people chance after chance to repent and turn to Him. God’s purpose in judgment was not destruction but reconciliation. His motivation was not revenge but compassion. He wasn’t wielding his power and justice merely as punishment but as invitation.
In every ounce of rendering judgment, God calls to his people, “Come back to me.” His perfect character never wavers.
Does God take His judgment too far?
We may accept that God’s character is perfect but still struggle when His judgment feels extreme. Why does God judge the people He claims to love? On the surface, we may believe that a God without judgment is a God of love. But when we really consider the evils of this world, no one wants a God who simply looks the other way.
Just ask the parent of a child who has been abused or the spouse who has been widowed through an act of violence. No one wants a God who casts the victim aside and looks at a perpetrator saying, “We need to be a little nicer.” That is not loving.
When we see the evils of this world, we want justice. We want a God who is both gracious and just—a God who judges evil even while He offers grace to the perpetrator. We want loving justice and love that is just.
God alone can deliver true justice. He does so in perfect love.
As humans we are simply too flawed to offer this perfect blend of love and justice. It is impossible. Only God can accomplish that work. And in His mercy, He did so through Jesus’s death on the cross. God’s ultimate judgment for humanity’s evil rained down, not on us, but on Himself in the person of Jesus. In that moment, He was condemned so that we might live. God’s perfect love and perfect justice collided, resulting in eternal grace for those who believe.
So perhaps God is challenging us to ask a new question. Instead of “Why does God judge the people He loves?” maybe we should ask, “Can I trust the One who judges?” When we reflect on His full character and honestly seek to know Him, we discover that He alone can deliver true justice. And He does so in perfect love.