Heavenly Judgment in Early Jewish Texts

3rd Century BCE–7th Century CE
Ancient painting featuring a menorah with seven lit candles inside a bordered circle, surrounded by decorative patterns and arches on a stone surface.
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Many apocalyptic works of the late Second Temple period depict a heavenly figure judging people after death or at the end of days. These courtroom scenes present a wide variety of images. Most famously, the book of Daniel predicts that the archangel Michael will inscribe into a book the names of people who receive eternal life. In the Testament of Abraham, the angel Michael serves not as judge but as tour guide. He gives Abraham a glimpse of a more elaborate judgment scene that includes three separate tribunals overseen first by Abel (the murdered son of Adam), then by the twelve sons of Jacob, and finally by God. In 1 Enoch, God chooses a righteous “elect one” called the “son of man” to judge humanity. Whereas this book, in a subsequent chapter, identifies the eschatological “son of man”—first mentioned in Daniel 7—as Enoch himself (the great-grandfather of Noah), New Testament writers identify him as Jesus of Nazareth.

In the Greek 3 Baruch (also known as the Apocalypse of Baruch), Jeremiah’s scribe is taken on a tour of the heavens. In the fifth heaven, he meets the angel Michael, who carries the keys to its gate. In this unique judgment scene, flowers represent a person’s good deeds in life, and Michael presents offerings of these flowers, made by angels on behalf of the righteous (whose baskets are fuller than those of others). By contrast, in the second Sibylline Oracle, those resurrected at the end of days undergo a judicial “trial by ordeal” as they walk through fire.

According to the Talmud, a person’s deeds are weighed in order to determine the soul’s ultimate fate. Should their merits and transgressions be evenly balanced, God tilts the scale toward mercy. Elsewhere, the Talmud describes testimony for or against the deceased, given by their own personified deeds, by their body or soul, or by two designated angels.

Related Primary Sources

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Michael, the Great Prince

Daniel 12:1
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At that time Michael, the great prince, the protector of your people, shall arise. There shall be a time of anguish, such as has never occurred since nations first came into existence. But at that…

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Abel and the Twelve Tribes

Testament of Abraham 13:1–14

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And Abraham said, “My lord Commander-in-chief, who is this all-wondrous judge? And who are the angels who are recording? And who is the sunlike angel who holds the balance? And who is the fiery angel…

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Son of Man

1 Enoch 46:1–3; 49:4; 51:1–4

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At that place, I saw the One to whom belongs the time before time. [ . . . ] And I asked the one—from among the angels—who was going with me, and who had revealed to me all the secrets…

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Baskets of Flowers

3 Baruch 11–15Â Â Â

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And the angel of power took me and led me to the fifth heaven. And he showed me large gates, and names of men were written (on them), and they were closed. And I said, “Lord, will these…

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Trial by Ordeal

Sibylline Oracles 2.214–283

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Then the imperishable angels of immortal God, Michael, Gabriel, Raphael, and Uriel, who know what evils anyone did previously, lead all the souls of men from the…

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Weighing Good Deeds and Sins

y. Pe’ah 1:1, 16b
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One who performs mostly good deeds inherits the garden of Eden. One who performs mostly transgressions inherits Gehenna. R. Yosi bar Ḥanina said: It does not say [God] “who…

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All Past Deeds Are Shown

b. Ta‘anit 11a

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God of faithfulness and without falsehood; [He is just and upright] (Deuteronomy 32:4). God of faithfulness—Just as evil ones receive recompense in the world to come even for the…

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The Soul and the Body Testify

b. Ḥagigah 16a

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R. Judah ben R. Naḥmani, the translator for Resh Lakish, expounded: What is the meaning of Do not trust a friend; do not put your faith in a general; guard what comes out of your mouth from her who…

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Good Deeds and Sins Accompany the Dead

b. Sotah 3b
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R. Samuel bar Naḥmani said R. Jonathan said: Anyone who fulfills one commandment in this world, that commandment precedes him and goes before him in the world to come, as it is said: And your…