Heb. 9:27 speaks of entering judgment at the moment of death.
In queue for judgement, definitely. Judged at the moment of death? There is some debate there.
"And as it is appointed unto men once to die, but after this the judgment:" - Heb 9:27 KJV
Heb 9:27 mentions a chronology of appointed events for everyone of mankind:
1st) Death
2nd) Judgement
The verse by itself doesn't indicate whether this happens instantaneously or with a gap of thousands of years. The verse just mentions chronology, not timing.
Following the KJV for this verse, it is part of a larger sentence which includes Heb 9:28.
"So Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many; and unto them that look for him shall he appear the second time without sin unto salvation." - Heb 9:28 KJV
The flow of the full Heb 9:27-28 sentence is essentially "1st death, 2nd judgement: but Christ appeared and died once for our sins, and Christ shall appear the second time for salvation". Which to me seems like it is tying the timing of judgement with the second coming as a consolidated one time future event.
"The" in "the second time" is a definitive article, meaning that it isn't multiple second events happening individually for people across time.
Salvation in itself is a healing process, or a transformative process. Saving is contextually about preservation from something.
Judgment simply means to set things right; it does not mean condemnation
Judgement means a discernment of some kind. In the case of the day of judgement, it is talking about sorting the sheep from the goats, etc. An outcome of judgement can be condemnation, and an outcome of judgement can be salvation.
Salvation itself is a healing process which essentially means to "put things right".
We err when we think "salvation" simply means the salvation of our souls
I agree. Those in Christ have a bodily resurrection into incorruption. There is an importance in the body that is sometimes overlooked.
The woman with the issue of blood was saved from her diseases by placing her faith in the Lord (Mat. 9:22).
KJV has this as "was made whole". The concept of healing is there (which ties in with the concept of salvation) but I'm not sure I see the entire context you are trying to express here.
As for Heb. 7:28, can you tell me when the old covenant officially closed?
The ordinances of the law were nailed to the cross. The tearing of the veil of the Temple at that event is a significant point in time. The sequence where Christ states, "It is finished" would be a likely candidate. This would mark the changing of the priesthood, and the changing in the ordinances of the law from the law of Moses to the law of Christ. It went from the ever-changing mortal OT priesthoods finally to the immortal priesthood in Christ. And on the first day of the week Christ rose as the head Priest. With the new the old was made obsolete.
A fallen temple became a martyred idol for those that rejected Christ. But the specific function of the temple was already obsolete as soon as Christ's role as head priest and the covenant of Christ in general came into play. The temple was a meaningless husk relative to the true faith when 70 AD rolled along.
if you deny the invisible return of Jesus to judge those who were under the law of Moses
I don't remember the exact passages off the top of my head but Christ readily speaks through the Holy Spirit. Would it be necessary for a bodily return of Christ in the case of 70 AD?
I agree that the Romans could easily be understood as ministering from God's will by the destruction of the Temple.
"For rulers are not a terror to good works, but to the evil. Wilt thou then not be afraid of the power? do that which is good, and thou shalt have praise of the same: For he is the minister of God to thee for good. But if thou do that which is evil, be afraid; for he beareth not the sword in vain: for he is the minister of God, a revenger to execute wrath upon him that doeth evil." - Rom 13:3-4 KJV
But why would it be necessary to judge every soul in that territory on that day as opposed to keeping them "asleep" awaiting judgement day?
Everyone recognized that the Lord had come because they perceived Him to be during the events that were taking place just as happened throughout the entire OT.
Had come physically? Or through the Holy Spirit?
Experiencing Christ's presence through the Holy Spirit would be the case for any Christian at the time. I just don't see the justification to believe that a physical second coming occurred during 70 AD. I'm looking to have the reasoning laid out for why you would see it as being necessarily or compellingly the case.
There are some nuances in this topic. The RCC and some Protestant groups believe in the real presence of Jesus in the Eucharist, but this is not counted as an additional coming of Christ each mass. There is a specific kind of coming of Christ that counts as the Second Coming in those perspectives.