Sunday:
12 October 14
Dear Troy & Mia; David and Marie:
Ezekiel 38
And the word of the YHWH came unto me,
saying:
Son of man, set thy face against Gog, the
land of Magog [the chief prince/the prince of the chief] of Meshech and Tubal,
and prophecie against him
According to my NEW BIBLE DICTIONARY:
"In Ezekiel 38:2 we are introduced to
'Gog, of the land of Magog, the chief prince of Meschech and Tubal. The Septuagint understood Magog as a people,
not a country. The only reasonable
identification of Gog is with Gyges, king of Lydia (c.660 BC)--Assyrian: Gugu:
Magog could be Assyrian ma(t) gugu "land of Gog". The linkage with peoples at the extremities
of the then known world (Ezk. 38:5-6; cf. Rev. 20:8) suggests that we are to
regard them as eschatological figures rather than as historically identifiable
king [sic],
etc….Since we need not interpret Ezekiel 38-39 as earlier in time than Ezk.
40-48, and rabbinic tradition places Gog after the days of the Messiah, we need
see no contradiction between Ezekiel and Revelation, provided we understand the
millennium in the sense the rabbis gave to "the days of the Messiah"
Which strikes me as one of those "we
have no idea who Gog and Magog are" explanations. Gog and Magog also occur in The Koran at the
end of Sura 18 "The Cave" (which, as I read it, is all or mostly
YHWHistic in form and content).
Essentially, I think Gog and Magog are God
and YHWH, but erring on the side of YHWHistic inferences insofar as God's name
is God so giving God a different but similar name is the same as inferring that
YHWH God is the same as God (which is the YHWH's long-term point: YHWH is
either the actual God, YHWH is the same as God or God is a mistaken term for
the YHWH or all three).
The fact that "Gog" is a
palindrome seems significant to me, a kind of distillation/compression of the
YHWHistic argument itself -- which seems to me the larger point of Ezekiel in
toto: creating a consensus between God and YHWH at the apex of the Jewish
Revelation. What could better establish
that consensus than merging the two theologies/deities into a single name? If my inference is correct, this is, in fact,
what happened, in microcosm, with the Synoptic Jesus and the Johannine Jesus.
"Ma" being a maternal
distillation ("mama") seems to me to cover the single bolt hole left
by "Gog": an inferred
female/maternal "Gog": "Magog" -- while also providing an inversion
inference in its explanation: "the
chief prince and the prince of the chief" following along with God's
assertion of David's eschatological role: not as king, but as prince mirroring
the ultimate fate of the YHWH: subordinate to that of God.
If I'm right, then they ARE, indeed, eschatological
figures, signifying that this is of what the end times will be composed: the
further along we go in this epoch, the more the dynamic will be towards merging
God and His adversary, which we already see in our own age with the unrelenting
push to make men and women interchangeable.
I, for one, certainly don't see a
contradiction between Ezekiel and Revelation.
On the contrary, I think they represent the "scaled up"
enactment of the God/YHWH conflict. The
reference to Meschech and Tubal seems to me to point in that same direction,
since Meschech and Tubal are cited as descendants of Japheth and Shem and as
warlike northern peoples -- immediately to the north of Israel, in this
case: Assyria. Unbeknownst to the YHWH, as I see this
overview, Assyria versus Israel proves to be only the first incarnation of the
prophecy, to be followed by Babylon versus Israel and Rome versus Israel. All devastating conflicts leaving a mere
remnant of Israelis, but in which Israel ultimately prevails, the messianic
fulfillment through the Johannine Jesus ultimately collapsing the Roman Empire
as then conceived and converting it to Christianity.
Not knowing that this is, ultimately, what
is under discussion by God in Ezekiel 38, the YHWH could be forgiven for thinking
his/her/its self completely secure and at ease with what is being promised and
cited as the God/YHWH consensus view:
And say, Thus saith the Lord GOD; behold, I
against thee, O Gog, the chief prince of Meshech and Tubal.
And I will turn thee back, and put hooks
into thy chawes and I will bring thee forth, and all thine army, horses and
horsemen, all of them clothed with all sorts, a great company with bucklers and
shields, all of them handling swords.
Persia, Ethiopia and Libya with them; all
of them with shield and helmet
Gomer and all his bands, the house of
Togarmah of the North quarters, and all his bands, many people with thee.
Be thou prepared, and prepare for thy self,
thou and all thy company, that are assembled unto thee, and be thou a guard
unto them.
This being the regional, Assyrian prophecy,
there wouldn't be anything here that the YHWH wouldn't see as imminent (as well as seeing that there would be a
successive conflict on a larger scale arriving from Babylon). Since the YHWH viewed his/her/its self,
always, contextually -- Israel, Assyria and Babylon all having personalized
deistic names for the earth and the mountains, the season of spring, fertility,
birth, etc. -- there would be a perceived immunity. The YHWH (TO the YHWH) was God spelled forward
and backwards: Gog. The YHWH could wage
war against his/her/itself and always be assured that the YHWH would prevail
because the YHWH was on both sides of the conflict.
After many days thou shalt be visited: in
the latter years thou shalt come into the land, that is brought back from the
sword, is gathered out of many people against the mountains of Israel, which
have been always waste: but it is brought forth out of the nations, and they
shall dwell safely all of them.
This, I think, would have sounded an
ominous note for the YHWH since "they shall dwell safely all of them"
doesn't conform to the YHWHistic model of destruction. The YHWHistic notion is that there will be widespread,
wide scale destruction and that the YHWH will prevail because the YHWH is
implicit in all contexts. It would be
like betting that a Major League Baseball team will win the pennant this
year. A Major League Baseball team,
presumably, HAS to. That's quite a bit
different from God, metaphorically, saying ALL Major League Baseball teams will
win the pennant "after many days".
While confirming both the present and imminent context:
Thou shalt ascend and come like a storm,
thou shalt be like a cloud to cover the land, thou and all thy bands, and many
people with thee.
God cites His own omniscient awareness of
what actually WILL happen as opposed to what seems, inevitably, to BE
happening, omniscient awareness that extends to the innermost recesses of the
YHWH's conscious awareness:
Thus saith the Lord GOD; it shall also come
to pass, at the same time shall things come into thy mind, and thou shalt
[think an evil thought/conceive a mischievous purpose]
And thou shalt say, I will go up to the
land of unwalled villages; I will go to them that are at rest, that dwell
[safely/confidently] all of them dwelling without walls, and neither bars nor
gates.
To spoil the spoil and to prey the prey, to
turn thy hand upon the desolate places that are inhabited, and upon the people
that are gathered out of the nations which have gotten cattle and goods, that
dwell in the navel of the land.
Sheba and Dedan, and the merchants of
Tarshish, with all the young lions thereof, shall say unto thee, Art thou come
to take a spoil? Hast thou gathered thy
company to take a prey? To carry away
silver and gold, to take away cattle and goods, to take a great spoil?
This is, certainly, how the YHWH, in the
time of Ezekiel, would conceive of eschatology itself: nations and armies are proxies of…and
incarnations of…theological constructs.
That, for the YHWH, is how you determine whose theology is correct. If you're correct, you spoil the spoil and prey
the prey. If you're not correct, you ARE
the spoil and you ARE the prey. That
keeps happening throughout human history until, finally, A theology becomes
preeminent and destroys all other theologies.
There is no shortage of failed theologies in Ezekiel's time, thrown onto
the ash heap of history. Virtually all
of them would have had fertility and earth goddesses at their centres. But:
Therefore, son of man, prophecie and say
unto Gog, Thus saith the Lord GOD: in that day when my people of Israel
dwelleth safely, shalt thou not know it?
For the YHWH, another ominous note. The entire history of this epoch to the time
of Ezekiel consisted of -- and in -- Israel being in grave jeopardy. But, then, dwelling safely for a time until
being placed in grave jeopardy again.
In Israel, the central reality wasn't of a
fertility goddess or an earth goddess, but rather, as God has just
asserted: "the mountains of Israel
which have been always waste", an assertion that, in tandem with God as
the Ultimate Reality, is, for the YHWH ominously irrefutable.
What God is staking the end times upon and
the fate of Israel upon is the theological reality that Israel isn't just
another fertility goddess or earth goddess construct among many. Those elements are grafted on by the YHWH and
(God's Larger Point, as I read it) it is only the YHWH's self-identification
with monotheism that gives the YHWH -- Gog and Magog -- the illusion (and
that's ALL it is, is an illusion) of theological longevity.
And thou shalt come from thy place of the
North parts, thou and many people with thee, all of them riding upon horses, a
great company and a mighty army.
And thou shalt come up against my people
Israel, as a cloud to cover the land; it shall be in the latter days, and I
will bring thee against my land, that the heathen may know me, when I shall be
sanctified in thee, O Gog, before their eyes.
A seriously ominous note for the YHWH. "That the heathen may know me" is a
new wrinkle, a new way of viewing the history of this epoch. That's the net effect of conquest based all
or mostly in theology: the most
theologically accurate construct will ultimately prevail even (and often
especially) when it fails militarily.
And that is what happened and is
happening.
Gradually heathen and pagan culture wilts
before monotheism. Military conquest and
sacking and wholesale destruction are distinctly unpleasant and extremely,
anecdotally traumatic, but they're temporal in nature. The Assyrians -- and the Babylonians and the
Romans -- although unaware of that truth, therefore can only eradicate their
own construct by indulging in the appearance/facade of conquest. All that happens is a kind of inoculation,
impregnation or infection (or all three) by monotheism which is exemplified by
the Torah in Ezekiel's time.
Thus saith the Lord GOD, Thou he of whom I
have spoken in old time by the hand of my servants the prophets of Israel,
which prophecied in those days; years, that I would bring thee against them.
"Art" is interpolated into the
KJV text -- which attempts, thereby, to turn (what I read as) a definitive statement
by God into a question: "Art thou
he…?" Which I think results from
the translators really having no idea what is being discussed.
What God, it seems to me, is saying to the YHWH
-- or Gog, if YHWH prefers a palindrome form -- is that, whatever the YHWH
calls his/her/its self, everything is enacting itself in God's context. The
entire Torah consists of prophecies and theology endorsed by God. Everything that the YHWH has said in the
Torah -- which is a substantial portion of it -- is there either because it
reflects God's own theology -- that is, Reality -- or it is something that
needs to be enacted to demonstrate to the YHWH where the YHWH is
misapprehended. Or both.
To say that the YHWH isn't pleased by the
assertion of this self-evident truth would be a radical understatement:
And it shall come to pass at the same time,
when Gog shall come against the land of Israel, saith the Lord GOD, my fury
shall come up in my face.
Which isn't true, I don't think.
God doesn't have "fury".
God has nothing to be furious about.
Fury results from the unexpected imposition
or unexpected assault or unexpected and unavoidable impediment. For an omniscient being, nothing is unexpected. What God is doing, as I read it, is further
emphasizing the extent to which God KNOWS the YHWH and the YHWH's innermost
responses and awarenesses. It's all part
of making God and YHWH one here at the apex of the Judaic Revelation. Another way of saying "YOUR fury, YHWH
-- the fury you are experiencing right now as you recognize, in spite of
yourself, Actual Reality -- will, ultimately, come up in YOUR face. And it will do so multiple times."
For in my jealousy, in the fire of my wrath
have I spoken: surely in that day, there shall be a great shaking in the land
of Israel.
So that the fishes of the sea, and the
fowls of the heaven, and the beasts of the field, and all creeping things that
creep upon the earth, and all the men that are upon the face of the earth,
shall shake at my presence, and the mountains shall be thrown down, and the
towers shall fall and every wall shall fall to the ground.
And I will call for a sword against him
throughout all my mountains, saith the Lord GOD: every man's sword shall be
against his brother.
What God is saying is that the enactment
will take place. This is how the YHWH's fury will enact itself in lesser
contexts.
The human context is very prone to fury
because, like the YHWH, so much of what human beings experience is a)
unexpected and b) self-created. Fury
will come back to bite you. Fury, on the
scale of the Roman sacking of Jerusalem and the Temple in 70 AD, is subject to
the same entropy everything else is. It
isn't there forever. But, at the time
that it's taking place, it's Roman fury against Jewish fury.
Roman fury that this provincial outpost is
holding out against the greatest Empire the world has ever seen.
Jewish fury because they are about to --
again -- lose their Temple to the unclean goyim.
Fury directed against the heathen but also
redirected from God. You can't be
furious with God and be a good Jew, a good monotheist, but your fury -- as the
Babyonian Conquest seeks to reiterate itself -- would be almost a tangible
thing, knowing how the Babylonian Conquest had enacted itself and here it is
happening again.
"God, how can you let this
HAPPEN?"
The Larger Answer to that, it seems to me,
is the Torah has always existed in its same word-perfect form since the times
that it documents. The evidence was
always there that God and YHWH were two different beings: that worship of God
is right and worship of YHWH is wrong.
If you attempt to merge right and wrong and declare them right, you are
basically asking to unleash monumental destruction upon your own head and upon
your society. The choice to go through
that, as I read it, was made when each successive generation chose to believe
that God was YHWH and YHWH was God. And
that the Synoptic Jesus was the Johannine Jesus and the Johannine Jesus was the
Synoptic Jesus:
And I will plead against him with
pestilence and with blood, and I will rain upon him and upon his bands and upon
many people that with him, an overflowing rain, and great hailstones, fire and
brimstone.
The "God and YHWH"
consensus-building effect, at least, benefits from this as the YHWH gives the
eschatological prophecy his/her/its…self-aggrandizing and self-exalting… stamp
of approval:
Thus will I magnify myself, and sanctify myself,
and I will be known in the eyes of many nations, and they shall know that I,
the YHWH.
Next week:
God willing, Ezekiel 39.
Best,
Dave
Next Time: All Astoria. And not just the rape stuff... -"Past" Matt
4 comments:
What? No insect-killing this week?
-- Damian
Remember the Monty Python "killer joke" sketch? The part where a guy accidentally read 2 words of the Joke and was laid up in the hospital for a month? I accidentally read about half a sentence of this...my brain is going to hurt for at least 3 days.
As the "Asterisk - fulfilling Narrator" once said in another context, "Lives in a world all his own, folks."
But seriously, asking for a "serious" refutation (to the extent that theology, being inherently about things beyond the rational, finite human thought process, is subject to "refutation") of this stuff reminds me of the guys who insist they've "proved" that pi is rational after all, or that Einstein got general relativity wrong, and then say "Hah! The academics are ignoring me - that proves they know they can't refute my brilliant deductions!"
And for the record, I restate my acknowledgement of Dave Sim's vast powers as a visual storyteller and scholar of my favorite art form, comics. Just in case my Sim sycophant bona-fides are endangered by the above.
Tony D.: There's no contradiction in your post. When Dave was at the peak of his powers, there was no English-language cartoonist with greater command of the medium. His abilities as a comics scholar remain unproven, but I am among those looking forward to The Strange Death of Alex Raymond. But as a thinker ... well, Dave is a cartoonist.
-- Damian
"The fact that "Gog" is a palindrome seems significant to me, a kind of distillation/compression of the YHWHistic argument itself -- which seems to me the larger point of Ezekiel in toto: creating a consensus between God and YHWH at the apex of the Jewish Revelation. What could better establish that consensus than merging the two theologies/deities into a single name? If my inference is correct, this is, in fact, what happened, in microcosm, with the Synoptic Jesus and the Johannine Jesus.
"Ma" being a maternal distillation ("mama") seems to me to cover the single bolt hole left by "Gog": an inferred female/maternal "Gog": "Magog" -- while also providing an inversion inference in its explanation: "the chief prince and the prince of the chief" following along with God's assertion of David's eschatological role: not as king, but as prince mirroring the ultimate fate of the YHWH: subordinate to that of God."
Here we are again, watching someone go crazy right in front of our eyes. How very sad.
I'm sorry, I meant, this is obviously the Unified Theory which Einstein spent his intellectual life pursuing.
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