HEBREW: 1463 gwg Gowg
NAVE: Gog
EBD: Gog
SMITH: GOG
ISBE: GOG
PORTRAITS: Gog
Gog
In Bible versions:
Gog: NET AVS NIV NRSV NASB TEVson of Shemaiah of Reuben
prince of the people/land of Magog: eschatological
roof; covering
Greek
Strongs #1136: gwg Gog
Gog = "mountain"1) the king of the land of Magog who will come from the north
and attack the land of Israel
1136 Gog gogue
of Hebrew origin (1463); Gog, a symbolic name for some futureAntichrist:-Gog.
see HEBREW for 01463
Hebrew
Strongs #01463: gwg Gowg
Gog = "mountain"1) a Reubenite, son of Shemaiah
2) the prophetic prince of Rosh, Meshech and Tubal, and Magog
1463 Gowg gohg
of uncertain derivation; Gog, the name of an Israelite, alsoof some nothern nation:-Gog.
Gog [EBD]
(1.) A Reubenite (1 Chr. 5:4), the father of Shimei.
(2.) The name of the leader of the hostile party described in Ezek. 38,39, 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 (Rev. 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.
Gog [NAVE]
GOG1. A Reubenite, 1 Chr. 5:4.
2. A Scythian prince. Prophecy against, Ezek. 38; 39; Rev. 20:8.
GOG [SMITH]
(mountain).- A Reubenite, (1 Chronicles 5:4) son of Shemaiah.
GOG [ISBE]
GOG - gog (gogh; Goug):(1) A son of Joel, and descendant of the tribe of Reuben (1 Ch 5:4).
(2) The prince of Rosh, Meshech and Tubal (Ezek 38:2 f; 39:1-16). His territory was known as the land of Magog, and he was the chief of those northern hordes who were to make a final onslaught upon Israel while enjoying the blessings of the Messianic age. He has been identified with Gagi, ruler of Sakhi, mentioned by Ashurbanipal, but Professor Sayce thinks the Hebrew name corresponds more closely to Gyges, the Lydian king, the Gugu of the cuneiform inscriptions. According to Ezekiel's account Gog's army included in its numbers Persia, Cush, Put, Gomer or the Cimmerians, and Togarmah, from the extreme North. They are represented as a vast mixed horde from the far-off parts of the North, the limits of the horizon, completely armed and equipped for war. They were to come upon the mountains of Israel and cover the land like a cloud. Their purpose is plunder, for the people of Israel are rich and dwell in towns and villages without walls. His coming, which had been prophesied by the seers of Israel, shall be accompanied by a theophany and great convulsions in Nature. A panic shall seize the hosts of Gog, rain, hailstones, pestilence, fire and brimstone shall consume them. Their bodies shall be food for the birds, their weapons shall serve as firewood for seven years and their bones shall be buried East of the Jordan in Hamon-gog and thus not defile the holy land. The fulfillment of this strange prophecy can never be literal. In general it seems to refer to the last and desperate attempts of a dying heathenism to overturn the true religion of Yahweh, or make capital out of it, profiting by its great advantages.
(3) In Rev 20:7 Satan is let loose and goes to the four corners of the earth, Gog and Magog, to muster his hosts for the final struggle against God. In Ezekiel the invasion of Gog occurs during the Messianic age, while in Revelation it occurs just at the close of the millennium. In Ezekiel, Gog and Magog are gathered by Yahweh for their destruction; in Rev they are gathered by Satan. In both cases the number is vast, the destruction is by supernatural means, and is complete and final.
See MAGOG.
J. J. Reeve
Also see definition of "Gog" in Word Study