TLDR: Don Miguel Ruiz reinterprets the Christian concept of final judgment not as a day of divine condemnation, but as the culmination of inner work—the very last moment you judge yourself. Once you pass this final judgment through complete self-respect and release of internal conflict, you access the kingdom of heaven: a state of mind where unconditional love, respect for all, and inner peace become permanent. This is the core teaching Jesus shared with his disciples at the Last Supper, and it requires facing every judgment you have ever made about yourself until none remain.
What Was Jesus Really Teaching About the Kingdom of Heaven?
According to Ruiz, Jesus' contemporaries in Jerusalem expected a Messiah who would claim his earthly kingdom and lead a political uprising. When Jesus instead rejected this role, his followers felt betrayed and turned against him. Yet in his final teachings at the Last Supper, Jesus was preparing his disciples for something far more radical: a mystical understanding of what the kingdom of heaven actually is.
The kingdom of heaven, as Jesus described it to his disciples, is "a place where love is unconditional. It's a place where everybody live in their own kingdom and everybody's king or queen in their own kingdom." This is not a literal location you reach after death, but a state of consciousness available now—a way of being characterized by complete respect for oneself and others, and freedom from the burden of judgment.
Jesus knew his followers would be confused by later false prophets claiming to be messiahs or holders of truth. His sign to them was simple: "You will know the kingdom of heaven when the last judgment happen, the final judgment." This teaching was intentionally reserved for the disciples—the mystery school students trained to understand its deeper meaning—because the broader population, and indeed most of Christianity afterward, would misinterpret it entirely.
How Has the Final Judgment Been Misunderstood?
The popular Christian interpretation of final judgment portrays a day when God separates the righteous from the wicked. The good ascend to heaven; the evil are condemned to hell. This image has haunted Western consciousness for centuries—a cosmic courtroom where an external judge renders verdict on your soul.
Ruiz traces this misunderstanding to a fundamental confusion about the nature of the judgment itself. The concept of final judgment was not invented by Jesus; it belonged to mystery school teachings that predated him, including the Essenes, whose spiritual practices Jesus learned from. When these teachings passed into mainstream Christianity without the esoteric training to understand them, the symbolic and psychological meaning collapsed into literal apocalyptic imagery.
The last judgment is not about God judging you. It is the innermost layer of self-knowledge—what Ruiz calls "the very last step in any mystery school." It is the moment you stop judging yourself. And once that happens, judgment itself ends entirely: not only do you cease to judge yourself, you no longer judge anyone else.
What Happened in Jesus' 40 Days in the Desert?
To understand how Jesus knew this teaching, Ruiz points to the 40 days Jesus spent alone in the desert—a period that marks a threshold in his initiation three years before his death. During this time, Jesus faced himself completely. The biblical language of "facing the snake" or "facing Satan" is symbolic: these were not external demons, but all the judgments he had ever carried about himself, all the internal conflicts, all the ways his mind had been divided against itself.
Ruiz describes this period as a progression: "All the judgment to all his life was coming in front of his face. And he was winning, winning, winning. And it took 40 days till finally going to the very last judgment." This was not a single moment of temptation, but a systematic confrontation with every judgment, every doubt, every conflict until they were all resolved. Only after 40 days of this inner work was he ready to become the Christ—not the Messiah (the political or religious leader), but the Christ (the fully self-realized being).
What Changes When You Pass the Final Judgment?
When Jesus passed the final judgment—when he made that last judgment about himself and released it—something decisive shifted in his mind. He recovered what Ruiz calls "100% respect, mainly for himself." From that moment forward, his mind was completely at peace. He had graduated, in Ruiz's language, and "becomes the master."
This recovery of self-respect is not arrogance or inflation of ego. It is the exact opposite: it is the freedom from all the critical voices, the internalized judgments, the shame and doubt that fragment the mind. When you respect yourself completely—your body, your humanity, your path—you are no longer in internal conflict. And in that peace, there is no room for judgment of others either.
Ruiz describes the result in clear terms: "You respect yourself 100%. You respect your physical body 100%. You disrespect the program of what you are 100%. And when you respect 100% yourself, you respect everybody else also 100%." The "program" here refers to the conditioned mind—the beliefs and narratives you inherited. Disrespecting the program means releasing identification with those stories. Respecting yourself means honoring the awareness that is aware of the program.
How Does Respect Replace Judgment?
The shift from judgment to respect is not a subtle semantic change. Judgment divides: it sorts people (and yourself) into categories of good and bad, worthy and unworthy, right and wrong. It creates hierarchy and generates shame. Respect, by contrast, is inclusive: it honors the inherent dignity of existence itself, including your own body, your own choices, even your own errors.
Once you have completed the final judgment—once you have faced every judgment about yourself and released it—there is no return to that fragmented state. As Ruiz says directly: "After that, there is no more judgments. You don't judge yourself, and you don't judge anybody else." This is not an achievement you must constantly defend. It is a fundamental shift in how the mind operates.
In this state, love becomes unconditional because judgment, which creates conditions (you are worthy if you meet this standard; you deserve respect if you perform this way), has dissolved. Each person is free to live in their own kingdom. Each person is a king or queen in their own realm. And in that mutual respect and freedom, the kingdom of heaven exists not as a future reward, but as a present reality—"a place where the mind finds peace."
Why Was This Teaching Reserved for the Disciples?
Jesus intentionally gave this instruction in the context of the Last Supper, speaking only to those who had been trained in the mystery school tradition. This was not elitism, but pedagogical wisdom. The concept of final judgment, approached without proper preparation, becomes a terror—either a weapon of self-condemnation or a false hope pinned on divine intervention. Without understanding the inner psychological work required, the teaching becomes toxic.
For those ready to receive it, however, it becomes the master key. Jesus was offering his apprentices the exact road map he himself had traveled: face your judgments, complete the final judgment, recover 100% respect for yourself and all beings, and live in the unshakeable peace of the kingdom of heaven. This is not something that happens after death. It is available now, to anyone willing to do the work.
Where to Go From Here
If you recognize yourself in the fragmentation that judgment creates—the internal conflict, the shame, the division between who you think you should be and who you are—the path is available. The final judgment is not punishment; it is liberation. It asks you to face every way you have judged yourself, every standard you have internalized, every condition you have placed on your own worth. And then to let those judgments go, one by one, until only respect remains.
This is the kingdom of heaven Jesus was describing: not a place, but a state of being. Not a future achievement, but your natural freedom once the mind is at peace. The last judgment is not the end of hope; it is the end of the judgments that have kept you in conflict. And in that ending, everything begins.




