Gathering the Nations
to Arma-
(heap of sheaves)
gai-(in the valley)
don(of judgment)
Daniel 11:1-39 – an overview
V1: Darius the Mede
V2: 3 more kings follow Darius, then a 4th who stirs up theire of Greece
V3: Alexander; Greeks replace Persians as world rulers
V4: Alex dies childless and empire ruled by 4 generals (“not of his posterity”)
V5-35: 2 of the 4 generals depicted as “king of the north” and “king of the south”; constant battles
V36-39: Roman empire replaces Grecian, a new religion to emerge, led by a ‘strange god’ who introduces new forms of worship
Kg of North
Kg of South
Seleucid – King of North
Ptolemaic – King of South
Helenistic
Antigonid
Daniel 11 describes the continuous battles between the kings of North and South
Battle between the kings of North and South continue to latter day – vv40-45
Present day countries:Turkey, Syria, Iraq, Iran, Pakistan, Afghanistan
Same 2 territories to be at war in the
latter days
The Replication Principle: God uses the same historical symbol for a latter day power because
the conditions are the same
Ptolemaic – King of South
Seleucid – King of North
“At the time of the end…”
Battle between the kings of North and South continue to latter day/end times – vv40-45
Present day countries:Turkey, Syria, Iraq, Iran, Pakistan, Afghanistan
Ptolemaic – King of South
A comparison of Ezek 38 and Dan 111. Invasions occur in the same time period
Ezek: in the latter years, the latter days (v8,16)Dan: the time of the end (11:40)
2. Israel is the nation invaded (38:8,14,16,18) (11:41,45) Ezek: upon the mtns of Israel, land of Israel, my people IsraelDan: he shall enter the glorious land…the glorious mountain
3. The description of the invader is identical (38:4,15) Ezek: all thine army, horses, horsemen, a great companyDan: with chariots and with horsemen (11:40)
4. The invader moves at a devastating speed, mounts an overwhelming attackEzek: like a storm to cover the land (v9)Dan: like a whirlwind (11:40)
5. The invader comes out of the northEzek: from thy place out of the north (38:6,15; 39:2)Dan: the king of the north (11:40)
A comparison of Ezek 38 and Dan 116. He is confederate with the same allies
Ezek:Ethiopia and Libya (38:5)Dan: Ethiopia and Libya (11:43)
7. His motivation is for financial wealth (38:12,13) (11:43)Ezek: to take a spoil and a prey; to carry away silver and goldDan: he seeks the gold and silver and precious things of Egypt
8. He enjoys killing JewsEzek: has an evil thought, seeks a prey (people) (38:10,12)Dan: to destroy with great fury, to make away many (11:44)
9. The invading army is miraculously destroyed by divine intervention (38:21-22) (12:1)Ezek: I will call for a sword against him…will plead against himDan: at that time shall Michael stand up, the great prince
10. The destruction of the invader occurs in the same locationEzek: upon the mountains of Israel (39:4)Dan: (in land of Israel) between the seas + glorious mtn (11:45)
The method of taking each of the prophetic pieces and adding them
together, to form a single, composite picture that tells the same end of the
story becomes a key to understanding latter day prophecy; Ezek 38 and Dan
11:40-45 must harmonize
Daniel 11:40-45 adds additional details1. Israel isn’t the only nation invaded, many countries are
as the King of the North moves south, “overflowing and passing over” (v40)
2. The invader comes “like a whirlwind” (tornado)
3. Gog comes with a navy (v40)
4. Gog doesn’t stop at Israel, Egypt is also a target
5. Jordan (Edom and Moab) escape the invasion
6. The destruction of Gog doesn’t happen until after he has passed through the Holy Land, conquered Egypt, and then returns to Israel
7. Jerusalem will be captured by Gog and be the focus of his attention when he is destroyed
Rev 16:16“And he gathered them together into a place called in the Hebrew tongue Armageddon.”
Armageddon – the watershed moment in future world events
• All latter day symbols/powers participate
• A cataclysmic event, the turning point in world affairs at time of the end
• It precipitates the establishment of the Kingdom of God on earth
• Israel’s enemies are exposed and eliminated
• It is called “the great and terrible day of the LORD” for good reason
Joel’s vision includes Israel’s repentance
• Setting: the people are unfaithful• God brings a northern invader who conquers Israel,
captures Jerusalem and Jews go into captivity• Following the defeat, God calls Israel to repent• They repent and in turn cry to God for help• God responds to Israel’s repentance by destroying the
invader (in the valley of Jehoshaphat)• The nation is blessed naturally through the land and
spiritually by their conversion
Israel’s repentance and conversion is a new detail added to Ezek 38 and Dan 11
Joel’s vision of Armageddon – ch 3• Their destruction likened to a harvest – v13 • v14 Multitudes gathered by God in the valley of
decision (threshing) to be threshed/cut apart• God’s judgment (Heb: shaphat) upon the nations is
emphasized – v2, 12• Heb for ‘multitudes’ = ‘hamown’ = Gog’s burial place
in Ezek 39:11 – “the valley of Hamongog”• The invading nations to be judged for their crimes
against God’s people – vv2-5• The ‘shapat’ (judgment) of the nations also noted in
Ezek 38:22
Joel’s vision of Armageddon – ch 3• Their destruction likened to a harvest – v13 • v14 Multitudes gathered by God in the valley of
decision (threshing) to be threshed/cut apart• God’s judgment (Heb: shaphat) upon the nations is
emphasized – v2, 12• Heb for ‘multitudes’ = ‘hamown’ = Gog’s burial place
in Ezek 39:11 – “the valley of Hamongog”• The invading nations to be judged for their crimes
against God’s people – vv2-5• The ‘shapat’ (judgment) of the nations also noted in
Ezek 38:22
Joel, Ezekiel, Daniel all agree
• A latter day prophecy (2:19,26) from the north (2:20)• Called “the LORD’s army” (2:11), “my great army”
(v25), because it will execute God’s will• Joel also sees 2 battles: Israel capture then contrasted
with her deliverance; God roars in both instances• The invader’s army described as horses and
horsemen (v4), arriving with rapid speed and overwhelming power (2:5-10), Jerusalem is taken
• God appeals to Israel: you must become a new people with a new heart/walk (2:12-14)
• Israel repents, is converted (v15-17) & God saves them• Invaders had arrived declaring “a holy war” (crusade)
in one final anti-Semitic act– v9 (unique to Joel)
Micah’s vision of Armageddon – 4:11-13• Same imagery of threshing – vv12-13
• It is God who gathers the nations – v12
• The invaders seek to defile Israel (heb = to soil in a moral sense), to shame/humiliate her – v11
• As in Joel 3, God will judge them because of their severe mistreatment of His people
• The Jews (following conversion) will be used by God to tread the nations – v13 (tipped hooves – Deut 25:4)
• It is the Messiah who brings peace (5:5); the peace existing at Gog’s invasion was only a psuedo peace
• Hab 3:12-14 – also uses imagery of threshing and reveals the invaders rejoice over mistreating Israel
What is the evidence Ezek 38 occurs before the Kingdom is established?
1. The Jews do not return to God’s favor until after the Gogian host is destroyed (39:22)
2. If Ezek 38 occurs after Jesus reigns in Jerusalem, then Israel suffers through two invasions (cp Zech 12,14)
3. Gogian invasion is a punishment for Israel’s tres-passes (39:26); nonsensical if Christ is already ruling
4. If ch 38 chronologically follows ch 37, then Israel is invaded after God has sanctified them (37:28).
5. If Christ is already on the throne, how could Gog view Israel as being defenseless and an easy prey?
6. Why would the Gentile (Tarshish) powers feel the need to resist Gog if Christ is already Israel’s king?
7. Gog’s destruction teaches Israel (39:22) and the gentile nations (38:16,23; 39:21) that Israel’s God is Supreme; nonsensical if Christ is already ruling