 Every superhero needs a supervillain to measure up 
against: Superman has Lex Luthor; Professor X has Magneto; Batman has the Joker, 
and more recently the mysterious strong-man Bane. In the book of Ezekiel, the 
hero/villain dynamic is embodied by the eponymous prophet and his (and Israel’s) 
nemeses of biblical proportions: Gog and Magog — a leader and nation that, 
according to Ezekiel’s prophecy, will attack the Jewish people before the end of 
times.
Every superhero needs a supervillain to measure up 
against: Superman has Lex Luthor; Professor X has Magneto; Batman has the Joker, 
and more recently the mysterious strong-man Bane. In the book of Ezekiel, the 
hero/villain dynamic is embodied by the eponymous prophet and his (and Israel’s) 
nemeses of biblical proportions: Gog and Magog — a leader and nation that, 
according to Ezekiel’s prophecy, will attack the Jewish people before the end of 
times.
Gog and Magog represent one of the most powerful 
themes in biblical tradition: ancient enemies who will rise up — and ultimately 
be defeated — during an apocalyptic battle at the end of the world. Gog and 
Magog are such a compelling trope that they appear in other religious 
narratives, as well. They’re in the Koran, and in the Christian Book of 
Revelation.
This supervillain even shows up in the modern-day 
mythology of comic books, where a bad guy who calls himself Gog is responsible 
for killing Superman and stealing his powers in the DC Comic Justice Society of 
America. Watch out, Lex Luthor, Gog is after your job!
 
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