Appears you ignore the very clear teaching of scripture in Matthew 25:31-46, read it again and again.
The Final Judgment To Eternal Punishment and Eternal Life takes place in verse 46
Your distraction does not delete the clear presentation of scripture. There is one future final judgment to eternal punishment, eternal life, do you teach otherwise.
Of course you dont want to see the word "Eternal" in verse 46, you have a false earthly kingdom to build, where humans will be born, live, and die physical death
Scripture states "Eternal Life" in verse 46 and the kingdom seen in Matthew 25:34 is the "Eternal Life Kingdom" Simple
It truly makes me sad to see such gross wresting of scripture, in a desperate attempt to avoid what they so very explicitly state in so very many places.
You keep saying that this is the final judgment and insist that the scriptures tell of only one such final judgment.
The scriptures detail several different specific judgments. The one in Matthew 25:31-46 is specifically one of "all the nations." "the nations" does not mean the dead. it means the living.
There is another one in Ezekiel 20:35-38, where we read, "33 '
As I live,' says the Lord GOD, 'surely with a mighty hand, with an outstretched arm, and with fury poured out, I will rule over you. 34 I will bring you out from the peoples and gather you out of the countries where you are scattered, with a mighty hand, with an outstretched arm, and with fury poured out. 35 And I will bring you into the wilderness of the peoples, and there I will plead My case with you face to face. 36 Just as I pleaded My case with your fathers in the wilderness of the land of Egypt, so I will plead My case with you,' says the Lord GOD. 37 'I will make you pass under the rod, and I will bring you into the bond of the covenant; 38 I will purge the rebels from among you, and those who transgress against Me; I will bring them out of the country where they dwell, but they shall not enter the land of Israel. Then you will know that I
am the LORD.'"
Ezekiel 20:33-38
Verses 37-38 describe a judgment, not of "all the nations," but specifically of those Israelites which had just been brought back from "the countries where" they had been "scattered" in verses 34-35. And the last chapter of Isaiah very clearly teaches that this will take place after Messiah has returned, not before.
Again, there is another judgment which is called "the judgment seat of Christ," which is mentioned in Romans 14:8-13 and 2 Corinthians 5:9-10 and described in 1 Corinthians 4:3-5. At the time of this judgment, we are explicitly told that everyone (ἕκαστω in the Greek text, which literally translates "as to-each") will have praise from God. This cannot even possibly be the same judgment one in which some are condemned and some rewarded.
And finally the judgment of the dead which is described in Revelation 20:1-15 is clearly described as taking place after the end of the earthly kingdom, which is explicitly stated to be after the resurrection of the righteous.
This judgment is indeed final, and indeed has eternal consequences, for all those judged at this time. But you have zero scriptural basis for assuming either that this is "the final" judgment, or for assuming that there is only one such judgment.
You are the one that is willfully ignoring a very large number of explicitly stated scriptures, in a desperate attempt to make your amil system work. For although Revelation 20 is the only passage that states the length of time the future earthly kingdom will last, (And it says, six times over, that it will last a thousand years,) many other scriptures describe this future earthly kingdom. Even if you could possibly be correct in claiming that the term "a thousand years," was only typical of a very long time, this would not in any way eliminate the conclusive nature of the very many scriptures that explicitly say that when the long awaited Messiah finally comes, He will set up a kingdom on this earth, with a human ruler sitting on a throne in Jerusalem, and with a system of worship that is neither like that under the law of Moses or like that we have today.
All this is explicitly stated, and this is just a very small fraction of the very many explicit statements abut this future earthly kingdom. Aside from simple ignorance of the scriptures, which I doubt that you could plead, denying that God will actually keep the very many explicitly stated promises He made, is nothing but rank unbelief.