The Battle of
Armageddon
The mountain of Megiddo
By Jon W. Quinn
It was during the gulf war with Iraq
that we heard it once again. "This is it!" They said. "The prelude to the
final battle...the battle of Armageddon!" But wait a minute. I thought they
had said that the Iraq-Iran war was the opening shots of Armageddon. And
before that, the 1973 Arab-Israeli war. And before that, the Arab-Israeli
conflict of 1967. And didn't the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan have
something to do with it?
There has been a lot of foolish speculation about it. It is easy to watch the
headlines and then to lift some Biblical passage out of its context and say
"See, the Bible predicted this event!" In fact, the battle of Armageddon is a
favorite topic because there are always plenty of trouble spots, especially in
the Mideast, which provide the headlines around which one can weave his
theories of how that final great battle is forming. From the amount of
attention given Armageddon you would think that it must be a prominent Bible
topic. It is not! In fact, "Armageddon" is mentioned only once and "the battle
of Armageddon" is not mentioned at all!
The one passage which does mention "Armageddon" (or more correctly, "Har-magedon")
occurs in the book of Revelation: "And
the sixth angel poured out his bowl on the great river, the Euphrates; and its
water was dried up, that the way might be prepared for the kings of the east.
And I saw coming out of the mouth of the dragon and out of the mouth of the
beast and out of the mouth of the false prophet, three unclean spirits like
frogs; for they were spirits of demons, performing signs, which go out to the
kings of the whole world, to gather them together for war on the great day of
God, the Almighty. (Behold, I am coming like a thief. Blessed is the one who
stays awake and keeps his garments, lest he walk about naked and men see his
shame.) And they gathered them together to the place which in Hebrew is called
Har-magedon." (Revelation 16:12-16).
Megiddo in History
"The kings came and fought; then fought the kings of Canaan at Taanach near
the waters of Megiddo;" (Judges 5:19). The word "Har-magedon" comes from the
Hebrew. The word "Har" means "mountain" and "Magedon" refers to an ancient
site of many battles called "Megiddo." The battle mentioned above took place
under the leadership of Deborah and Barak about 1100 years before Christ (See
also the fourth chapter of Judges). Megiddo was of strategic importance
because it occupies a valley through which armies could march on their various
campaigns. Because of the many history-changing battles fought there, Megiddo
became a symbol, sort of like our own Alamo or Pearl Harbor. It came to
symbolize warfare, struggle and death.
But that's about Megiddo. Where is "the mountain of Megiddo" from which we get
the word Armageddon? The answer is that there is no such literal place! It
does not exist as far as geography is concerned! Then why does the book of
Revelation mention it?
Background to the Book of Revelation
"The Revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave Him to show His bond-servants,
the things which must shortly take place; and He sent and communicated it by
His angel to His bond-servant John" (Revelation 1:1). Though certainly the
book of Revelation contains glimpses of the final judgment and eternity, the
great majority of the book was prophesying of things which "must shortly take
place" back in about 100 A.D. Also; "Blessed is he who reads and those who
hear the words of the prophecy, and heed the things which are written in it;
for the time is near" (Revelation 1:3). Any speculative theory which contends
that Armageddon has something to do with our future has to first ignore what
this book itself says about the timeframe! The book is written in symbols.
That is why there can be a "mountain of Megiddo" at all. It is a symbol, just
like the dragon, the beast, the false prophet, the frogs, the drying up of the
river Euphrates and the rest of the context of the chapter and book. Well
then, what does it symbolize?
It symbolizes something that took place back in the first, second and perhaps
third centuries. The book of Revelation emphasizes that it is speaking of
things which "must shortly take place." The early church was undergoing
tremendous persecution. Roman power and culture awed the world and Rome
considered Christianity as an enemy to be destroyed. The kings of the world
sought alliances with Rome and thus joined her in persecuting Christians
everywhere. The Roman emperor was made into a deity and all Roman subjects
everywhere were expected to worship him. Christians would not do so. But Rome
was so powerful. It had armies with swords and shields. The Lord's kingdom had
its army also, not armed with literal swords but with the word of truth. But
how can those armed only with the truth of the Scriptures stand against cold
steel?
The Promise
"And after this I heard, as it were, a loud voice of a great multitude in
heaven, saying, 'Hallelujah! Salvation and glory and power belong to our
God..." (Revelation 19:1). The promise is that Rome, in all her power and
glory, will fall. But the truth which she sought to destroy will survive.
There will first be suffering and sacrifice on the part of the faithful. But
it will only serve to show the whole world that this new faith is worth dying
for. Chapter four shows that God is still on His throne. He has not
surrendered. He will not allow Rome to win. He will call upon them to repent,
and when they refuse He will bring them down. "Har-magedon" refers to that
struggle between right and wrong; to the great conflict between world forces
of darkness and the forces of light as they follow the true "King of kings and
Lord of lords". Many of His followers would lose their lives, but not their
souls. There would be a resurrection. Jesus would win the battle of
Har-magedon. History shows that He did. Rome fell. Truth prevailed.
We all have our battles to wage. We are as certain of victory as they were
when we remember Who our King is; 'Tis Jesus, the King of Kings and the Lord
of Lords.
From The Bradley Banner 8/24/2014
Published by the Bradley Church of Christ
1505 E. Broadway
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