The Christian Memory of “Armageddon”
A
T-shirt spotted on the street in Jerusalem said it all. On the back it read, “I
survived Armageddon 2010.” 2010? Wasn’t Armageddon supposed to be the end of
the world? It is now 2017; apparently, we all survived.
A glance at the T-shirt’s front clarified matters. It
read, “Tel Megiddo Excavations.”
You see, the word “Armageddon” is a Greek attempt to
render the Hebrew place name “Har Megiddo” which, in English, means “Mount
Megiddo.” Ancient Greek manuscripts did not indicate the “H” sound, so the “H”
was lost.
Megiddo is an ancient city located on the western
edge of Israel’s Jezreel Valley. It was first occupied in the Chalcolithic
period and, by the time the Israelites arrived in Canaan around 1200 B.C., the
Canaanites had already lived there for more than two millennia. That is roughly
10 times the length of time the USA has been a country.
During that time, Megiddo became a “tell”: a
human-built mountain created from centuries of building and rebuilding in the
same spot, with new houses and buildings being placed directly on the ruins of
older ones.
Megiddo was abandoned in the early sixth century B.C.
By the time of Jesus, the first century, Megiddo and its surrounding territory
had been without significant populations for more than half a millennium. This
large hill overlooked a large valley and key nearby roads, but no nearby
settlements.
This was the “Mount Megiddo” that found its way into
the New Testament. In Revelation 16, it is designated as the site for the
“battle on the great day of God the Almighty,” the final battle in this book’s
highly symbolic narrative of God’s triumph over his spiritual and earthly
enemies.
The passage recalls Megiddo as a place through which
the world’s travelers passed and where armies frequently fought. Even though the
city of Megiddo had been long abandoned, Revelation’s author identified these
two characteristics with Megiddo. And, historically speaking, this is generally
accurate.
Located on the Jezreel Valley’s west side, Megiddo
guarded two passes that brought trade from the Mediterranean coast into the
Jordan Valley and beyond. This was a west-east route that began in Dor (on the
coast), crossed the mountains north and south of Megiddo, then traversed the
Jezreel Valley to the ancient city of Beth Shean in the Jordan Valley.
This important trade route was heavily guarded by the
Canaanites. When the Israelites settled the land, they were not able to conquer
this route even though they controlled the territory to the south and to the
north. At least that is what the books of Judges and Joshua state.
And, this failure caused the area of the Jezreel
Valley in front of Megiddo to become such a battleground. Judges 4 and 5 relate
two stories of a massive battle during which the Israelites seem to have
finally conquered Megiddo, perhaps 150 or 200 years after their arrival. This
timeframe roughly corresponds to the archaeological evidence indicating an
Israelite presence on Megiddo’s tell.
Megiddo also was on an important north-south land
route along the Mediterranean’s east coast. The northern end of the Carmel
mountain range stretches down to the sea north of Megiddo where it makes travel
difficult. Caravans and armies moving along the coast avoided it by cutting
inland through the passes near Megiddo.
That is what happened when Pharaoh Necco brought his
army north during the reign of King Josiah, whom the books of Kings present as
a greater, more God-fearing king than either King David or King Solomon. As
Necco’s army passed through the Jezreel Valley in front of Megiddo, King Josiah
met him with the Israelite army to fight him.
Unfortunately, Josiah was killed during the battle,
weakening Israel’s ruling class. Within two decades, his kingdom was conquered
by the Babylonians who deported the royal family and the court.
So, the sense given by the New Testament’s book of
Revelation that Megiddo is a crossroad of the world and place echoes the
reality of the previous 1,200 years. This echo persisted despite Megiddo’s
centuries-long neglect to resurface in Revelation’s spiritual symbolism of
Christianity’s ultimate triumph delivered by God.
Labels: Armageddon, Christianity, conquest of Israel, Israel, Jesus, Jezreel Valley, Judaism, King Josiah, Megiddo, Pharaoh Necco, trade route
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home