Gog: 1. A Reubenite
(1 Chronicles 5:4) the father of Shimei.2. The name of the leader of the hostile party described in
(Ezekiel 38:1-39:1)ff as coming from the "north country" and
assailing the people of Israel to their own destruction. This
prophecy has been regarded as fulfilled in the conflicts of the
Maccabees with Antiochus, the invasion and overthrow of the
Chaldeans, and the temporary successes and destined overthrow of
the Turks. But "all these interpretations are unsatisfactory and
inadequate. The vision respecting Gog and Magog in the
Apocalypse
(Revelation 20:8) is in substance a reannouncement of this
prophecy of Ezekiel. But while Ezekiel contemplates the great
conflict in a more general light as what was certainly to be
connected with the times of the Messiah, and should come then to
its last decisive issues, John, on the other hand, writing from
the commencement of the Messiah's times, describes there the
last struggles and victories of the cause of Christ. In both
cases alike the vision describes the final workings of the
world's evil and its results in connection with the kingdom of
God, only the starting-point is placed further in advance in the
one case than in the other." It has been supposed to be the name
of a district in the wild north-east steppes of Central Asia,
north of the Hindu-Kush, now a part of Turkestan, a region about
2,000 miles north-east of Nineveh.