The phrase "
the coming Judgment
" is just that --
THE JUDGMENT IS YET TO COME
! It hasn't happened yet... in spite of the false beliefs of millions of deceived people in the world who think that so-called "immortal souls' are being judged and sentenced every day for the past 6000 years or so.
The Bible says otherwise:
"...THE DEAD KNOW NOTHING..." (Eccle.9:5 NLT).
"...For when YOU GO TO THE GRAVE, there will be no work or planning or knowledge or wisdom." (verse 10)
"The coming Judgment" awaits mankind at the end of God's plan. God calls it "The Last Great Day." It comes at the end of Christ's thousand year rule on earth, which is pictured in His commanded annual seven-day "Feast of Tabernacles" in the fall of the year -- the time of the year's abundant harvest. The "Last Great Day" is the "eighth-day" of the feast -- picturing JUDGMENT DAY [see Lev.23:36].
"In the Last Day, that Great Day of the Feast, Jesus stood and cried, saying, If any man thirst, LET HIM COME UNTO ME, AND DRINK..." (John 7:37 KJV).
Here Jesus gives us a portent of "the coming Judgment." Not "condemnation day" as some picture Judgment Day [although there will be those who shall utterly refuse Christ's Salvation, shall condemn themselves, and shall be cast into the Lake of Fire]... but it shall be the time at the conclusion of God's plan when the vast majority of blinded and Satan-deceived mankind who lived and died[fell asleep]in ignorance of God's Truth will have it revealed to them, then... and have their first opportunity for Salvation.
It is slang for orgasm.
The Phrase "It is as handy as it is becoming" means it is as useful as it is up and coming.
The phrase "you were right" means that the person being addressed accurately predicted or assessed a situation. It acknowledges that their judgment or perspective was correct.
It is a word or phrase said "by the way". It is used in law, and refers to wording that may be in a judgment but that is not essential to the argument of the judgment. A judge may make reference to a piece of evidence, "introduced by way of a cooperating jurisdiction". That clause has no bearing on the evidence itself, or the use of the evidence in coming to the final judgment.
It is a word or phrase said "by the way". It is used in law, and refers to wording that may be in a judgment but that is not essential to the argument of the judgment. A judge may make reference to a piece of evidence, "introduced by way of a cooperating jurisdiction". That clause has no bearing on the evidence itself, or the use of the evidence in coming to the final judgment.
'I understand your point of view' It does not indicate agreement, just comprehension
This could be referring to coming to a judgment before hearing the full story from all sides - pre-judging could lead to the wrong decision. The phrase `look before you leap` says much the same thing, I think.
This phrase implies that two gunshots were heard coming from the beach or shoreline. It suggests that a gun was fired twice in that location.
after judgment day
Jonah
It means that the batsman has scored his first run since coming on the pitch.
what is domestic judgment mean?