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Condemnation <ref name="term_55424" />  
== Baker's Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology <ref name="term_17739" /> ==
<p> <b> CONDEMNATION. </b> —The disappearance of the term ‘damnation’ in the [[Revised]] [[Version]] NT 1881, OT 1885 of the [[Gospels]] is suggestive of more sober and reasonable thoughts about the [[Divine]] judgment against sin. [[Condemnation]] at the last may indeed fall like a thunderbolt upon the rejected ( Matthew 21:19). The fig-tree in the parable has a time of probation and then may be suddenly cut down ( Luke 13:6-9). At the <i> Day of [[Judgment]] </i> the universal benevolence of God experienced here ( Matthew 5:45, Luke 6:35) will give place to His righteous wrath against the persistently rebellious. Condemnation is the irrevocable sentence then passed upon the abusers of this life ( Matthew 25:41-46). [[Especially]] will this sentence of rejection and punishment descend then upon the hypocrite ( Mark 12:40). The state of the condemned will be a veritable [[Gehenna]] ( Matthew 23:33). <i> [[Weeping]] </i> and <i> gnashing of teeth </i> picture the dreadful condition of condemned souls ( Matthew 22:13; Matthew 24:51; Matthew 25:30). Not only, we must suppose, punishment by pain for rebellion, but regret at past indifference, remorse at past folly, shame at past malice, will be the terrible feelings lacerating souls that have found not forgiveness but condemnation. The condemned will regret their indifference to Christ’s demands, which they have ignored ( John 3:36). They will be tortured by the keen perception of their extreme folly in rejecting the knowledge they might have used ( Luke 11:31-32). They will feel the shame of having their secret thoughts of evil exposed to a light broader than that of day ( Matthew 23:28). This will be the condemnation to perpetual darkness for those who have loved darkness more than the light ( Matthew 8:12; Matthew 22:13; Matthew 25:30). </p> <p> But in this present life there is always at work a certain inevitable and automatic Divine condemnation. ‘The earth beareth fruit of herself’ ( αὐτομάτη, Mark 4:28), and yet the fact is due to the directing will of God. So, even in this life, the Divine condemnation of evil is being worked out, without that irrevocable sentence which constitutes the final condemnation. The guest may already feel the lack of a wedding-garment ( Matthew 2:11), and so, warned by the present workings of condemnation, escape the last dread sentence. Nothing but what God approves can endure the stresses and storms that are imminent ( Luke 6:46-49). [[Without]] the sap of God’s favour the vine must already begin to wither ( John 15:6). </p> <p> But this present immanent condemnation is rather a most merciful conviction of sin and wrongfulness ( John 16:8-11). In this present age condemnation is not final for any; nay, God’s purpose is the eternal security of men in true peace and true happiness ( John 3:17; John 12:47). So far from condemnation being any man’s sure fate, there is no need for any member of the human family to have to undergo such judgment as might result in condemnation ( John 5:29). The strong assertion in the present ending to the second Gospel, ‘He that disbelieveth shall be condemned’ ( Mark 16:16), is surely the expression of the true conviction that [[Christ]] is the only Way to avoid condemnation (cf. John 3:36). Condemnation is God’s prerogative, and not the privilege or duty of the individual [[Christian]] as such: ‘Condemn not, and ye shall not be condemned’ ( Luke 6:37). </p> <p> W. B. Frankland. </p>
<p> From the standpoint of semantics, condemnation is part of legal terminology. When it is discovered that a crime has been committed, that the law has been broken, the process of investigation may lead to formal charges being levied against a defendant. The process of litigation leads to the outcome, a verdict of acquittal or guilt. The verdict indicates that the defendant is either free from or accountable to the law's penalty for that crime. Thus the result is either vindication or condemnation. [[Condemnation]] can refer either to the legal status of liability to punishment or to the actual infliction of that punishment. At times the word is also used in a broader context to refer to negative evaluations of a person by peers or by one's own conscience. This legal process is to some extent the background for biblical language about judgment and condemnation. </p> <p> In biblical theology, God as creator, redeemer, and lawgiver, is the judge of all humankind. He instituted the family, civil government, and the people of God as institutions governing human relationships. In the Old [[Testament]] theocracy God mediated his justice through judges, kings, priests, and prophets. In the New Testament the church's leaders are accountable for administering his justice to the people of God. All this is based on the fact that God has acted to redeem human beings and reveal his will to them. Those who refuse to believe and obey are guilty of breaking his law. Their punishment has already begun and their ultimate condemnation will occur at the final judgment if they do not repent before death. </p> <p> In the Old Testament rebellion against God began in the garden of Eden (&nbsp;Genesis 3 ). Our first parents turned away from God's plan, leading to their death and alienation. Yet God patiently bore with his rebellious creatures, and chose [[Abraham]] and his descendants to be his special people and mediate his blessings to all nations (&nbsp;Genesis 12 ). He redeemed [[Israel]] from Egypt and gave them a land along with a covenant that set before them the conditions of his continued blessing (&nbsp;Exodus 19-20 ). God as creator, redeemer, and covenanter stood as judge over Israel and set before them life and prosperity, death and adversity (&nbsp;Exodus 34:5-7; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 30:15-20 ). Through his prophets he continued to call Israel to obedience, yet his theocratic rulers frequently neglected his justice by condemning the innocent and vindicating the guilty. Eventually God condemned this miscarriage of justice by sending other nations to carry Israel into captivity. Thus the Old Testament generally stresses the justice of God in punishing sinners during the present life, not the afterlife (but see &nbsp;Daniel 12:2 ). To probe this theme further in the Old Testament, one should study the [[Hebrew]] words <i> sapat </i> [שָׁפַט], "to judge, " and <i> mispat </i> [מִשְׁפָּט], "judgment." </p> <p> In New Testament theology the rebellion of the first Adam with its disastrous consequences of death and condemnation for all humankind is more than offset by the obedience of the second Adam, the Lord [[Messiah]] Jesus (&nbsp;Romans 5:12-21; &nbsp;1 Corinthians 15:22 ). Jesus' sinless life and sacrificial death provide the basis for God's giving life and justification to all who believe in him. God remains just in justifying sinners because of the perfect redemption accomplished by Jesus, the sinners' substitute (&nbsp;Acts 13:38-39; &nbsp;Romans 3:21-26 ). Those who have been made right with God by faith in Christ are not condemned (&nbsp;John 5:24; &nbsp;Romans 8:1-4; &nbsp;Colossians 2:14 ), but those who refuse to believe in Jesus are condemned already (&nbsp;John 3:16-18; &nbsp;Romans 1:18-32; &nbsp;Galatians 1:8-9 ). Unless they repent they face the irrevocable finalization of this condemnation at the resurrection and judgment (&nbsp;Matthew 25:46; &nbsp;John 5:28-29; &nbsp;Acts 17:30-31; &nbsp;24:15; &nbsp;Romans 2:5-16; &nbsp;2 Thessalonians 1:5-10; &nbsp;2:9-12; &nbsp;1 Peter 4:4-5,17; &nbsp;2 Peter 2:1-10; &nbsp;Jude 4-9; &nbsp;Revelation 20:7-14; &nbsp;21:6-8; &nbsp;22:12-17 ). In the meantime, expectation of this eschatological judgment motivates believers to scrutinize their lives so that they will not be condemned with the world (&nbsp;1 Corinthians 11:31-32 ). The discipline of the church is also to be carried out with this eschatological perspective in mind (&nbsp;1 Corinthians 5:1-13 ). </p> <p> To summarize, the theme of condemnation is always seen in the Bible against the background of a just God who creates, redeems, and covenants with his people so that they may live out his justice on the earth. [[Sinners]] who come to this God in faith are not condemned, but are expected to live together in a community where justice prevails in the vindication of the oppressed and the condemnation of the oppressor. </p> <p> David [[L.]] Turner </p> <p> <i> See also </i> [[Hell]]; [[Judgment]] </p> <p> <i> Bibliography </i> . [[F.]] Bü hsel et al., <i> [[Tdnt,]] </i> 3:920-55; [[H.]] Buis, <i> The [[Doctrine]] of [[Eternal]] [[Punishment]] </i> ; [[W.]] Eichrodt, <i> [[Theology]] of the Old Testament </i> ; [[D.]] Guthrie, <i> New Testament Theology </i> ; [[J.]] [[P.]] Louw and [[E.]] Nida, <i> [[A]] Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament Based on Semantic Domains </i> ; [[L.]] Morris, <i> The Biblical Doctrine of [[Judgment]] </i> ; [[W.]] Schneider et al., <i> [[Nidntt,]] </i> 2:361-71. </p>
       
== Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament <ref name="term_55427" /> ==
<p> Not only from the Gospels, but from the rest of the Revised Versionas well, the word ‘damnation’ disappears, ‘condemnation’ taking its place in &nbsp;Romans 3:6 and &nbsp;1 Timothy 5:12, ‘destruction’ in &nbsp;2 Peter 2:3, and ‘judgment’ in &nbsp;Romans 13:2 and &nbsp;1 Corinthians 11:29. The reason is that the process of degeneration, which had begun before the translation of the Authorized Version, linked up the term with conceptions of finality and eternity, originally alien to it, and thus made it no longer representative of apostolical thought. With the exception of &nbsp;2 Peter 2:3, the same Greek root occurs in all instances, and the context in the various passages is mainly responsible for the different shades of meaning. In the case of the verb, an exception must also be made of &nbsp;Galatians 2:11, where the idea is that the act of Peter needed no verdict from outside, but carried its own condemnation, as in &nbsp;Romans 2:1; &nbsp;Romans 14:23 and &nbsp;Titus 3:11. </p> <p> Little difficulty attaches to the use of the term in the sense of ‘destruction’ in the case of [[Sodom]] (&nbsp;2 Peter 2:6), to the reference to the ark as a visible sign of the destruction about to come upon the unbelieving (&nbsp;Hebrews 11:7), or to the denunciation by James (&nbsp;James 5:6) of men who unjustly ascribe blame to others and exact penalty for the imagined fault. The wanton are rightly condemned for the rejection of the faith whose value they had learnt by experience (&nbsp;1 Timothy 5:12). Sound speech, on the other hand, cannot be condemned (&nbsp;Titus 2:8). The man who fails to judge and discipline himself is reminded of his duty by [[Divine]] chastening; and if that fail, he shares in the final judgment with the lost (&nbsp;1 Corinthians 11:31 f.; cf. &nbsp;Mark 9:47 ff.). In &nbsp;Romans 5:16; &nbsp;Romans 5:18 condemnation is the consequence of an original act of evil, and suggests the antithesis of a single act of righteousness, the effects of which overflow to the potential justification of all men; and the freedom from condemnation continues beyond the initial stage of forgiveness and ripens into all the assured experiences of union with Christ (&nbsp;Romans 8:1). </p> <p> In several passages the term is involved in a context which to some extent obscures the meaning. The justification of evil as a means to good is indignantly dealt with in &nbsp;Romans 3:8; with the authors of the slander that he shared that view the apostle refuses to argue, but he leaves them with the just condemnation of God impending. That God ‘condemned sin in the flesh’ (&nbsp;Romans 8:3) has been taken to mean that the sinlessness of Christ was by contrast a condemnation of the sin of man, or that the incarnation is a token that human nature is essentially sinless; but the previous phrases connect the thought with the death rather than with the birth of Christ. For Him as man death meant the crown of sinlessness, the closure of the last avenue through which temptation could approach Him; and in virtue of union with Christ, the believer who is dead with Him is free from sin, though not immune from temptation. In &nbsp;2 Corinthians 3:9 ‘condemnation’ is antithetical to ‘righteousness,’ and synonymous with ‘death’ in &nbsp;2 Corinthians 3:7. The argument appears to be that sin is so horrible that the law which reveals it is glorious; <i> a fortiori </i> the covenant that sweeps it out exceeds in glory. ‘This condemnation’ of &nbsp;Judges 1:4 ought grammatically to be retrospective, but [[Nt]] usage allows a prospective use with an explanatory phrase in apposition. The meaning is that ungodliness of the kind described is self-condemned, as has been set forth in various ways in [[Scripture]] (cf. &nbsp;John 3:19, &nbsp;2 Peter 2:1-3) as well as in <i> [[Enoch]] </i> , i. 9 (cf. &nbsp;Judges 1:14-16). ‘The condemnation of the devil’ (&nbsp;1 Timothy 3:6) is a comparison of his fall with that of any vainglorious member of the hierarchy. Both being God’s ministers to the people, the similarity is one of circumstance, not necessarily of degree. </p> <p> [[R.]] [[W.]] Moss. </p>
       
== King James Dictionary <ref name="term_58812" /> ==
<p> [[Condemnation,]] n. </p> 1. The act of condemning the judicial act of declaring one guilty, and dooming him to punishment. <p> For the judgment was by one to condemnation. &nbsp;Romans 5 . </p> 2. The state of being condemned. <p> [[Dost]] thou not fear God, seeing thou art in the same condemnation. &nbsp;Luke 23 . </p> 3. The cause or reason of a sentence of condemnation. &nbsp;John 3 .
       
== Webster's Dictionary <ref name="term_103265" /> ==
<p> '''(1):''' (n.) The ground or reason of condemning. </p> <p> '''(2):''' (n.) The act of condemning or pronouncing to be wrong; censure; blame; disapprobation. </p> <p> '''(3):''' (n.) The act of judicially condemning, or adjudging guilty, unfit for use, or forfeited; the act of dooming to punishment or forfeiture. </p> <p> '''(4):''' (n.) The state of being condemned. </p>
       
==References ==
==References ==
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<ref name="term_55424"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/hastings-dictionary-of-the-new-testament/condemnation+(2) Condemnation from Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament]</ref>
 
<ref name="term_17739"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/baker-s-evangelical-dictionary-of-biblical-theology/condemnation Condemnation from Baker's Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_55427"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/hastings-dictionary-of-the-new-testament/condemnation Condemnation from Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_58812"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/king-james-dictionary/condemnation Condemnation from King James Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_103265"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/webster-s-dictionary/condemnation Condemnation from Webster's Dictionary]</ref>
       
</references>
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