Eldad and Medad in Wikipedia
are mentioned in the Book of Numbers, and are described as
having prophesied among the Israelites, despite the fact that
they had remained in the camp, while 70 elders had gone to the
tabernacle outside the camp to receive the ability to prophecy
from God[1]. According to the narrative, Joshua asked Moses to
forbid Eldad and Medad from prophecy, but Moses argued that it
was a good thing that others could prophesy, and that ideally
all the Israelites would prophesy[2].
In rabbinical tradition, Eldad and Medad are said to have
predicted a war with Gog and Magog, with the king from Magog
uniting the non-Jews and launching war in Palestine against
the Jews, but these non-Jews being defeated and slain by fire
from God's throne[3][4]. Some classical rabbinical literature
argues that the non-Jews would be at the mercy of the Jewish
Messiah[5]; such Messianic connections of Eldad and Medad also
circulated among early Christian groups, and a particularly
popular discussion of such prophecy was even quoted in the
deutero- canonical Shepherd of Hermas[6]...
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