Armageddon in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
har-ma-ged'-on (Harmagedon from Hebrew har meghiddo, "Mount
of Megiddo"; the King James Version Armageddon): This name
is found only in Rev 16:16. It is described as the rallying-
place of the kings of the whole world who, led by the
unclean spirits issuing from the mouth of the dragon, the
beast and the false prophet, assemble here for "the war of
the great day of God, the Almighty." Various explanations
have been suggested; but, as Nestle says (HDB, s.v), "Upon
the whole, to find an allusion here to Megiddo is still the
most probable explanation." In the history of Israel it had
been the scene of never-to-be-forgotten battles. Here took
place the fatal struggle between Josiah and Pharaoh-necoh (2
Ki 23:29; 2 Ch 35:22). Long before, the hosts of Israel had
won glory here, in the splendid victory over Sisera and his
host (Jdg 5:19). These low hills around Megiddo, with their
outlook over the plain of Esdraelon, have witnessed perhaps
a greater number of bloody encounters than have ever stained
a like area of the world's surface. There was, therefore, a
peculiar appropriateness in the choice of this as the arena
of the last mighty struggle between the powers of good and
evil. The choice of the hill as the battlefield has been
criticized, as it is less suitable for military operations
than the plain. But the thought of Gilboa and Tabor and the
uplands beyond Jordan might have reminded the critics that
Israel was not unaccustomed to mountain warfare. Megiddo
itself was a hill-town, and the district was in part
mountainous (compare Mt. Tabor, Jdg 4:6,12; "the high places
of the field," 5:18). It will be remembered that this is
apocalypse. Har-Magedon may stand for the battlefield
without indicating any particular locality. The attempt of
certain scholars to connect the name with "the mount of
congregation" in Isa 14:13 (Hommel, Genkel, etc.), and with
Babylonian mythology, cannot be pronounced successful. Ewald
(Die Johan. Schrift, II, 204) found that the Hebrew forms of
"Har-Magedon" and "the great Rome" have the same numerical
value--304. The historical persons alluded to in the passage
do not concern us here.
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