Gog and Magog
-

In every Middle East crisis, some Christians rush to match Ezekiel with the headlines. But that is not faithful prophecy reading. It is anachronism. And when Bible prophecy is misread this way, it can do more than confuse the church. It can help sanctify conflict instead of calling God’s people to peace, discernment, and hope…
-
Many read Ezekiel 38–39 as a forecast of an end-times military invasion. But what if Gog and Magog aren’t about Russia or Iran at all? This essay explores Ezekiel’s vision not as a war map but as a dramatic, theological proclamation of God’s victory over cosmic evil—then, now, and at the end of the age.