The Timing of Gog and Magog: The Ezekiel series, part 73 (38:7-11)

The Timing of Gog and Magog
Ezekiel 38:7-11
Ezekiel series, Part 73

Introduction
Many Bible prophecy teachers have incorrectly said something about Gog and Magog’s battle in Ezekiel 38, and I might be one of them. We have incorrectly said that Gog and Magog could happen at any moment.
Upon some careful study of the words here, I no longer think it could happen at literally any moment. I believe there are a few things that need to take place before Gog and Magog can come about.
Gog and Magog, at a minimum, is several months away. It could be years. It could even be a thousand years. There’s a lot of possibilities, and we’ll talk about those possibilities today on the Cross References podcast.
[theme music]

V7-11, A Land of Unwalled Villages
Welcome to the book of Ezekiel: a Cross References Bible study where we learn how every small piece of the Bible tells one big story- and how they all connect to the cross and Christ.
My name is Luke Taylor, and I’m ready. I’m ready for the rapture, I’m ready to go to heaven, and I’m ready to see all these end times things play out.
Thankfully, for the rest of the world, God is giving us some more time before bringing all these things to pass.
But there’s one element of future prophecy that we really don’t know the timing of just yet, and that’s the alliance and battle of Gog and Magog in Ezekiel 38 and 39. We’ve been studying who the players are the past few weeks.
Originally, this week I was going to talk about WHY Gog attacks. But after studying these verses a little more closely, I decided it would be more appropriate to talk about WHEN the attack may happen this week, and we can talk about why it happens next week.
So in the first six verses of this chapter, we covered the various nations who will be involved in this invasion, probably led by the Russians. Definitely Turkey. Definitely Iran. Almost certainly Libya. And then either Sudan or Ethiopia. And they all come against Israel. This will have some kind of end-times context, although when in the end times is not totally clear. So let’s read the verses, discuss them textually, and then go through some theories of the timing.
Ezekiel 38:7-11
7 “Be ready and keep ready, you and all your hosts that are assembled about you, and be a guard for them. 8 After many days you will be mustered. In the latter years you will go against the land that is restored from war, the land whose people were gathered from many peoples upon the mountains of Israel, which had been a continual waste. Its people were brought out from the peoples and now dwell securely, all of them. 9 You will advance, coming on like a storm. You will be like a cloud covering the land, you and all your hordes, and many peoples with you.
10 “Thus says the Lord God: On that day, thoughts will come into your mind [speaking to Gog, the leader of Russia or perhaps Turkey], and you will devise an evil scheme 11 and say, ‘I will go up against the land of unwalled villages. I will fall upon the quiet people who dwell securely, all of them dwelling without walls, and having no bars or gates,’
So why do I associate this with the end times? The reason I do is because of a phrase in verse 8: in the latter years. Another way of saying that could be “in the last days.” It means this was not a prophecy for Ezekiel’s day. This was a prophecy for far far off in the future.
Some might say, “well that could just mean anytime since Jesus left this earth, it might not have anything to do with the end times.” But within the context of this section of Ezekiel, I believe it’s talking about the events related to the end times, and I believe we’re in those end times. The chapters just before this were talking about the regathering of Jews into their land, which has been going on since 1948. The chapters right after this will be talking about the Millennium. So in context, I think this is talking about something that could happen in the end times, and that we’ve kind of already entered them.
Then it makes the comment that this will fall upon a land restored from war. This is why I don’t think this battle could happen at any moment. It says that it happens to a land restored from war. So Israel needs to fight in some kind of conflict before Gog and Magog can happen. If you look at Israel right now, in November of 2024, they are currently engaged in warfare both on their own soil and with Iran in foreign soil. This has been true since October 7 of last year.
So when Ezekiel 38 talks about a land restored from war, the war that it’s talking about might be going on this very minute. Isn’t that exciting? The conflict it’s talking about in the Bible could be going on right now this very moment. And after this current conflict is resolved, then Gog and Magog could take place.
It says in verse 11 that Gog comes against a land of unwalled villages. I think that’s key to knowing the timing of Gog and Magog. The wall might not be literal. Walls are a defensive structure. Walls are something you put up to protect yourself from invaders.
I take the Bible literally, but that said, when it says “walls,” I’m not sure if that means literal walls or if it’s talking about something like Israel’s Iron Dome protective system. I think it literally means “something,” and that’s what taking the Bible literally means. It means that it means something real, but we recognize that the Bible also uses figurative or symbolic language at times.
For example, in this chapter, it will talk about how Gog and Magog’s forces come against Israel with swords and shields and arrows and on horses. Well, those words would have made clear sense to Ezekiel’s readers. But in modern times, that’s now how we think of doing warfare. So I’m fine with saying that those woulds could be understood in modern times to refer to tanks and guns and missiles. But I do think those words mean something. I don’t think it’s just talking about the spiritual arrows of demons. You can spiritualize a lot of this stuff away, and that’s what some people do. They’ll say “the horses are the spiritual horses of unbelievers who persecute the church.” I don’t think that; I think these words do literally mean something, but they could be using symbolic language to communicate it.
So when we think about this phrase “to a land of unwalled villages,” we have to think about the idea that this is trying to communicate. Unwalled villages is the Hebrew word “perazot.” This means walls, bars or gates. It means the defensive structure that you put up to protect your people and keep enemies out. For cross references purposes, the only other places that perazot appears is:
Zechariah 2:4-5
‘Jerusalem shall be inhabited as villages without walls, because of the multitude of people and livestock in it. And I will be to her a wall of fire all around, declares the Lord, and I will be the glory in her midst.’
And Esther 9:19
Therefore the Jews of the villages, who live in the rural towns [or towns without walls], hold the fourteenth day of the month of Adar as a day for gladness and feasting, as a holiday, and as a day on which they send gifts of food to one another.
Now if you look at the context of Esther 9, the Jews have just survived a genocidal attack against them, and it mentions that the people dwelled in safety now, in towns without walls, because they feel secure. They feel that God is protecting them. That’s what Zechariah 2 is getting at as well. In fact, I wonder if Zechariah 2 is a vision about Gog and Magog; it’s not as specific as Ezekiel 38 and 39, but read it for yourself and see if you think it’s talking about the same thing. The people feel so secure that God is protecting them that they aren’t worried about having walls to protect them.
So that will be Israel’s attitude as Ezekiel 38 comes up. They feel so secure, they’ve laid down their defenses. Now, that has not been the story in Israel basically since it re-began as a nation in 1948. They’ve always been surrounded by enemies. They have constantly had to deal with rockets and attacks from their enemies at any given time. So Ezekiel 38 opens on an Israel that is unlike the Israel any of us have observed in our lifetimes.
I’ll say something about current events, and please don’t take this as an endorsement or defense of any candidates or voting or anything like that. I am not freaked out about this election at all; I am secure that God is in control no matter what happens. But you probably remember that Donald Trump had several Middle East peace deals in the pipeline just before he lost the 2020 election, and those peace deals haven’t moved forward by the Biden administration. If he got reelected and restarted those peace negotiations and brought peace to that region, we could very well have a scenario in place for Ezekiel 38 to take place. That’s how close it could be. We aren’t there right now, but it could be within months or years down the line.
And so for Israel to be a land without walls means that it feels like there’s no pressing threat, and that’s when Gog and his alliance of nations feels that they can get away with striking at Israel.
And so verse 9 says that they will descend upon Israel like a swarm, like a wave. Like a a storm or a cloud covering the land, there will be so many troops and quote-unquote “horsemen.” Now why is Gog doing this? Well, there’s several reasons, which we will talk about next time. But for now, let’s talk about WHEN this attack might take place.

Timeline of the end times
Let’s start by establishing the timeline of things to come. This will just take a minute but we’ve just got to make sure we’re all on the same page. Prior to Jesus coming back, there will be a seven-year period of tribulation on the earth. The 7 years comes from Daniel 9. The description of what will happen during that time comes in the book of Revelation.
After the 7 years of tribulation is finished, Jesus will return to this earth, and this is the Second Coming of Christ. This is the end of the world as we know it. Jesus is back, and He begins a one-thousand-year-reign known as the Millennium. I am one of those Christians who takes the Millennium as a literal 1000-year period. In a few months from now on this podcast, we’ll be going into a deep-dive of what all the Millennium entails, because the Bible says a whole lot about this time period, yet we really don’t study it all that much so it’s very mysterious to us.
Now, where does the rapture that you hear about fit in on all this? Well, there are a few different theories about that, but I tend to place the rapture at the beginning of the seven-year tribulation. My main reason is that the tribulation is called God’s wrath, and the Bible says we believers are not appointed to wrath. But that’s a whole other topic on its own, and I’ve done several episodes about the rapture here on the pod. You can search them up if you’d like.
So the basic timeline goes like this: we’re looking to the rapture as the next major event on God’s calendar, and it could come at any moment. There are things that *could* happen before the rapture takes place, but there’s nothing that *has* to happen. At sometime after the rapture- probably shortly after- the seven-year tribulation will begin. At the end of that is the Second Coming of Christ. But the Second coming of Christ is not the end of sin itself. There will be a 1000-year reign of Jesus Christ physically on this earth from Jerusalem. At the end of the Thousand Years will be the final judgment, and then a new heavens and new earth will be remade to last for all eternity.
Now believe it or not, there is a whole list of options for where you can place Gog and Magog on that whole timescale. The Gog and Magog conflict is not solidly tied to any one location in Scripture- except maybe one, but we’ll get there. So let’s go in chronological order.

1. Before the Tribulation
Gog and Magog could take place prior to the tribulation. It doesn’t actually have to be attached to anything I mentioned earlier. Now that Israel is back in the land, it could happen, and a hundred years could go by before the rapture and tribulation begin. That’s a real possibility. So technically, this could all happen detached from anything else.
Putin could get the idea and start putting together his coalition right now. As I said, I don’t think it could happen this year. Israel is currently embroiled in a conflict. As I record this, it’s the first weekend of November. There’s been chatter on my Telegram app all week that Iran is poised to strike Israel and that they might strike Iran first. By the time you hear this, you probably know more than me. So tensions are high for Israel right now. But in
Ezekiel 38:11, Gog said
‘I will go up against the land of unwalled villages. I will fall upon the quiet people who dwell securely, all of them dwelling without walls, and having no bars or gates,’
That verse is really what I see as the key verse to figuring out the timing of this conflict. 38:11. Ezekiel 3-8-1-1. That’s the key verse to look at if you’re trying to see whether Gog and Magog could happen at any moment. This cannot logically apply right now to Israel’s situation. But as I said, perhaps the current conflict could lead to a scenario of peace for Israel, and this paves the way for the battle of Gog and Magog.
This makes sense because if we jump ahead a little bit in the narrative of this battle, it’s going to say in the aftermath section in
Ezekiel 39:9
Then those who dwell in the cities of Israel will go out and make fires of the weapons and burn them, shields and bucklers, bow and arrows, clubs and spears; and they will make fires of them for seven years,
So we know that Israel is going to use the weapons for fuel or as an energy source for 7 years after this battle. And we’ll talk about what that could mean soon as well, too. But that means it fits very nicely to place this battle of Gog and Magog before the tribulation, since the tribulation itself is a 7-year period of time.
A reason Gog and Magog might not be prior to the tribulation is a line in
Ezekiel 39:8
And my holy name I will make known in the midst of my people Israel, and I will not let my holy name be profaned anymore. And the nations shall know that I am the Lord, the Holy One in Israel.
So if this takes place before the tribulation, that’s a kind of odd verse because we know that the Israeli people won’t collectively acknowledge Jesus until the end of the tribulation, and a lot of nations will be deceived into worshipping the Antichrist.
It also says in 39:28
Then they shall know that I am the Lord their God, because I sent them into exile among the nations and then assembled them into their own land. I will leave none of them remaining among the nations anymore.
So verses like this cause some prophecy teachers to say, well see, Gog and Magog must take place at the end of the tribulation, or at the end of the Millennium, since everybody gets saved at the end of it.
And that could be. I’m just here to present point-counterpoint today, so I’m not saying that’s wrong. But another way to look at it could be this: perhaps this isn’t the moment all the Jews get saved, but it may be more of the moment that they are reawakened to the reality of God. Right now, many Jews are secular and agnostic or atheistic. They’re very lukewarm toward God. But we see in Ezekiel 37 that the Jewish reawakening to God is happening in stages. It’s a slow progression. So perhaps this miraculous salvation from Gog’s armies will make the Jews realize: “woah, God really is real.” And it doesn’t mean they’re going to jump straight into believing in Jesus and the Gospel yet, but perhaps this will be more of a spiritual awakening within them that they go into the Tribulation believing God is real, even if they aren’t saved yet. And it says “I will leave none of them remaining among the nations anymore.” You see, right now, most of the world’s Jews are in Israel, but many of them are still scattered throughout the world. Here in America, we still have Stephen Spielberg and Bob Dylan and Chuck Schumer. Lots of Jewish individuals still here in America. But if the Jews of the world say, “Well God must be real, look at how He’s protecting Israel,” that could very well drive them to say, “I’ve gotta migrate back to my homeland.”
So the battle of Gog and Magog will drive the rest of the world’s Jews back home. To me, that’s why it’s really attractive to place Gog and Magog prior to the start of the seven-year tribulation. Because I could really see this conflict setting the stage for the events of the tribulation. And then we can get Chuck Schumer out of our government, which is a good thing if you don’t like him very much. Once all the Jews are back in their homeland, it really has them right where the Antichrist wants them.

Right after the Tribulation Begins
But another place people place Gog and Magog is right when the tribulation begins, and I’ll explain why. The 7-year tribulation begins with the appearance of the Antichrist. It says in
Daniel 9:27
And he shall make a strong covenant with many for one week, and for half of the week he shall put an end to sacrifice and offering.
Now, you can go back to episode 50 of this podcast if you want more info on what that means, but essentially, it’s saying that the Antichrist will make a 7-year covenant or treaty or agreement between nations, and that halfway through it- or at the 3-and-a-half-year point- he puts an end to sacrifice. He will commit the abomination of desolation, which desecrates the Temple in Jerusalem, and the Jewish people will be scattered. So the 7-year covenant of the Antichrist is the 7-year tribulation, and that’s what kicks it off. Now let’s go to
Revelation 6:1-2
Now I watched when the Lamb opened one of the seven seals, and I heard one of the four living creatures say with a voice like thunder, “Come!” 2 And I looked, and behold, a white horse! And its rider had a bow, and a crown was given to him, and he came out conquering, and to conquer.
The rider on the white horse is the Antichrist. He is holding a bow, which symbolizes a treaty. If you’d like more info on why, go back to an episode I did called The First Horseman of the Apocalypse. So the Antichrist appearing is the first judgment of the tribulation. Here’s the second:
Revelation 6:3-4
3 When he opened the second seal, I heard the second living creature say, “Come!” 4 And out came another horse, bright red. Its rider was permitted to take peace from the earth, so that people should slay one another, and he was given a great sword.
So right after the Antichrist makes his 7-year agreement, war breaks out across the planet. The second horse is a war horse. Many people think the Antichrist’s 7-year agreement is a peace treaty. It may be, but I try not to assume more than what the Bible says. But if it’s a peace treaty, it’s darkly funny that immediately afterwards, World War 3 breaks out. And some say that this World War 3 will actually be the battle of Gog and Magog.
One really attractive reason to place it here is because of a verse I read earlier:
Ezekiel 39:9
Then those who dwell in the cities of Israel will go out and make fires of the weapons and burn them, shields and bucklers, bow and arrows, clubs and spears; and they will make fires of them for seven years,
So since it mentions 7 years right there, this makes some people say, “well that must be the 7-year tribulation.” I’m fine with that. It makes sense; it slots in.
My issue with this idea goes back to the idea of what happens at the midpoint of the tribulation. The antichrist is going to turn on the Jews and start trying to commit genocide against them. So it seems a little tough to imagine that some of the Jews are hanging around to keep burning the weapons that it talks about there in verse 9.
So that’s why I don’t lean toward putting this at the beginning of the tribulation. I think it actually makes more sense to push it a few years before the tribulation even begins. I see it as something that moreso sets up the Tribulation.
But there are some scholars who put it here and I’m not against them having that belief. Charles Lee Feinberg, The Prophecy of Ezekiel commentary: “…placing the conflict in the tribulation is the [theory] which best harmonizes the prophetic scheme of the eschatological passages of the Old and New Testament.” So make of that what you will.
One more interesting tidbit, since we’re in the context of the horses of Revelation right here. Again, I broke all these down in four episodes in 2022 called “The First Horseman of the Apocalypse, The Second Horseman of the Apocalypse,” and so on. You can find out what they all mean if you want to scroll way back in my episodes and listen to them.
The four horses each have a color: the first is white, the second is red, the third is black and the fourth is green. What’s interesting about those colors is that they’re the colors of the Muslim flags of the world. If you look at the flags of Muslim nations, they are white, red, black and green. The Palestinian flag that you see ignorant protestors waiving around all the time are white, red, black and green. And when you look at the nations of the Gog/Magog alliance, all of their flags are white, red, black and green- except for Russia, which has a blue flag.
So can I prove that means anything? No. But it’s a very interesting connection to me, and it does perhaps hint that perhaps the Muslim nations- or even the nations of Gog and Magog- will have an important role to play in the beginning of the tribulation. So some place this conflict right after the tribulation begins.

The Battle of Armageddon
Then there’s another view that sees this Gog and Magog conflict as the Battle of Armageddon spoken of in Revelation 19, the final battle of the Antichrist, where Jesus shows up and obliterates him. This can make sense with the 7 years to burn the weapons, since that 7-year period can go right into the Millennium. That’s possible. But I feel like this is really the weakest option of where you can place Gog and Magog.
First of all, there are many differences in the two battles when you compare the descriptions of these two conflicts. In Gog and Magog, it’s a really specific set of nations who come against Israel, and it says they attack Israel from the north. But when you read about Armageddon in
Revelation 19:19, it says
And I saw the beast and the kings of the earth with their armies gathered to make war against him who was sitting on the horse and against his army.
Joel 3:2 says
I will gather all the nations and bring them down to the Valley of Jehoshaphat.
Zechariah 12:3 says
And all the nations of the earth will gather against it.
So it sounds a lot more comprehensive in the descriptions of Armageddon than Gog and Magog is, which is a much more specific group of nations. And then the conclusion of the battle is different as well. In Armageddon, Jesus comes back and everybody else just basically melts where they’re standing. The mere appearance of Jesus is enough to kill them in a very gruesome description in Zechariah 14 and Revelation 19.
At the battle of Gog and Magog, they launch their weapons at Israel and their weapons get slapped back at them. And there’s more things that happen that we’ll get to in a couple of weeks, but the details are different from what we get in Revelation.
And the main thing I really go back to is Ezekiel 38:11, “The land of unwalled villages.” That really doesn’t sound like a term that can describe Israel or Jerusalem at the end of the Tribulation, when they’re basically scattered and not even dwelling in Jerusalem. So I have to vote a big thumbs down on placing Gog and Magog at the end of the tribulation.

At the End of the Millennium
But the last view I’ll talk about is the idea of placing Gog and Magog at the end of the Millennium, and there is one very strong scriptural support for placing it here. The chapter that really boils the Millennium down to a nutshell is Revelation 20.
At the end of the Millennium, Jesus will give anybody who has been born on the earth during that thousand years and is still alive the option of following Him into eternity, or coming against Him in a final battle.
You say, why would anyone want to rebel against Jesus after being led by Him for 1,000 years? Well, I have no earthly idea. Perhaps we’ll get some more context after we do our Millennium study next year, but I think this speaks to the fact that everybody has a choice. Jesus does not force our love. And in the Millennium, remember that sin has not been done away with yet. The New Heavens and the New Earth comes after the Millennium wraps up, right after this battle. So people can still choose to sin, and even rebel against God. I don’t think it will be most people, but anybody anywhere in the world will have that option as the thousand years conclude.
it says in Revelation 20:7-10
7 And when the thousand years are ended, Satan will be released from his prison 8 and will come out to deceive the nations that are at the four corners of the earth, Gog and Magog, to gather them for battle; their number is like the sand of the sea. 9 And they marched up over the broad plain of the earth and surrounded the camp of the saints and the beloved city, but fire came down from heaven and consumed them, 10 and the devil who had deceived them was thrown into the lake of fire and sulfur where the beast and the false prophet were, and they will be tormented day and night forever and ever.
So obviously, Gog and Magog get a namedrop right here, which makes it seem very obvious that this is the best place to place the famous battle of Ezekiel 38 and 39.
And there are many Bible scholars who place it here. I believe Hal Lindsey is one of them. I won’t dog on anyone for putting it right here. It kind of makes sense.
Some of the weaknesses of this view are similar to the Armageddon problem. In the final rebellion here at the end of the Millennium, it says that nations from the four corners of the earth will come against the “camp of the Saints.” But Gog and Magog just mention a few specific nations.
Also, the conclusion of this battle is that fire goes down from heaven to wipe these rebels out. So they obviously aren’t studying their Bible well in the Millennium if they do choose to rebel. And this is similar but also a little different from how Gog and Magog is described in Ezekiel 38.
They could be the same event. But this is at the end of the Millennium. The New Heavens and the New Earth are made right after this. Everything in the Old Heavens and Earth will be wiped away with fire, totally burned away. So I don’t know how to make sense of the verse in Ezekiel 39 that says they’ll be burning the weapons for 7 years. It doesn’t fit, in my opinion.
You say, but wait Luke, then why would Revelation 20 specifically mention Gog and Magog if this isn’t Gog and Magog? In fact, let me read
Revelation 20:7-8 again:
7 And when the thousand years are ended, Satan will be released from his prison 8 and will come out to deceive the nations that are at the four corners of the earth, Gog and Magog, to gather them for battle; their number is like the sand of the sea.
So why is Gog and Magog mentioned here if this isn’t literally Gog and Magog?
Well, even though it mentions it here- and it’s perfectly fine to place it here based on that- it is my belief that Revelation is bringing up Gog and Magog here because it’s a callback. It’s saying, “this is LIKE the Gog and Magog of Ezekiel 38. This is like that battle that happened a thousand years ago.”
Why do I interpret it that way? Because Revelation is doing that all the time. Revelation is full of callbacks to past parts of the Bible. I’ve heard it said that there are more than 400 allusions to the Old Testament.
I call them allusions because I don’t believe the book of Revelation ever quotes the Old Testament directly. That’s very curious because it’s full of references to the Old Testament, and the New Testament books quote from the Old Testament all the time. But Revelation, to my memory, never directly quotes from the Old Testament, but literally hundreds of times it references something from the Old Testament.
For example, in Revelation 11, it talks about the two witnesses and calls them “the two olive trees and the two lampstands that stand before the Lord of the earth.” That’s a callback to Zechariah 4, which is talking about some guys named Zerubbabel and Joshua. But in Revelation 11, it calls the two witnesses the olive trees and lamp stands. So Revelation sometimes re-appropriates Old Testament terminology to future events, and I believe that’s what it’s doing here by mentioning Gog and Magog.

Next Time & Closing
Next time on this podcast, we will go into the “why” of the Gog and Magog conflict. I hope you aren’t tired of the words “gog” and “Magog” yet because we still have more to discuss. Next week, if we survived the election, we’ll regather here and talk about “why” this conflict takes place. Make sure you’re subscribed so you can get it!
In closing, as we talk about the timing of some of these end times events, I want to share a brief clip from the interview that took place this past week between Joe Rogan and Donald Trump. Did anyone else listen to this? Donald Trump was speaking about foreign policy, specifically about the Middle East, and he made this comment.
[play clip]
First of all, don’t take me playing this as a political endorsement of any kind. If your conscience leads you to vote for Donald Trump, go for it. If your conscience, says he is too pro-choice and pro-LGBT to vote for, don’t vote for him, I can respect that as well, as that’s a principled position. But I do hope you’ll vote in the other races because there are many other issues and people worth voting for.
Second of all, I was going to save that clip for a later episode, but then I realized that if Trump doesn’t win this week, then this clip won’t be relevant anymore. So I went ahead and used it here.
Third, it’s just fascinating to me that someone running for president, who has very few christian qualities, has an awareness of the Biblical significance of the Middle East. And he recognizes the major players on the scene: Russia, China, Israel and the Middle East. And the book of Revelation talks about China coming at Israel in the tribulation, and the end of the world being in the Middle East. And Ezekiel talks about Russia being a part of this, too. And it’s just never going to stop being fascinating to me that these nations that the Bible talked about 2500 years ago are the same ones that come up in our modern political discussions today. Which tells me that the end times may be right around the corner.
And so one last note about timing: all these things are going to come to pass. That’s why I really don’t worry about the election. Do I have an outcome I’d prefer? Sure. I mean, the outcome that I would have most preferred, the ship sailed on that a long time ago. America is in a dark places when these are the choices before us. But God is in control, and He is going to bring about what He wants to bring about.
If Donald Trump gets in, maybe he brings about the peace that Ezekiel 38 talks about Israel having, and turns it into a land of unwalled villages. And then Gog and Magog can happen soon and we might lose Bob Dylan but that’s OK because we’re that much closer to the end.
If Kamala Harris gets in, Bible prophecy is still going to come to pass, when it’s in God’s timing, which is the best timing. An election in America is not going to derail God’s plans.
Thanks for listening to this Cross References Bible Study on the Book of Ezekiel. This has been Luke Taylor, and I hope the Bible makes more sense to you after this episode.

The Timing of Gog and Magog: The Ezekiel series, part 73 (38:7-11)
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