Ezekiel 39:17-21 frames Gog's defeat as a sacrifice Yahweh himself officiates — a great zevach that deliberately inverts every element of the Levitical cult. Revelation 19 echoes LXX Ezekiel 39 directly and transforms the sacrifice into a supper, setting up the sharpest contrast in the entire book.
Daniel 2 says the fourth kingdom has dual legs and iron that persists into the feet — both East and West Rome together, divided yet still iron, mingled but not cleaving. Daniel 7's little horn from the fourth beast and Daniel 8's little horn from one of four Greek divisions are the same end-time figure, ended by the same stone cut without hands.
Revelation 17:1-18:24
Revelation 21:23
The Lamb is not called 'light' in Revelation 21:23. He is called 'lamp' — a device that holds and transmits light from another source. John's vocabulary for light, luminaries, and radiance is remarkably varied, and the distinctions are not decorative. They are the theology.
Ezekiel 38–39
The Masoretic Text confines Gog to Ezekiel's eschatological invasion. The Septuagint inserts him into Balaam's oracle and Amos' locust vision. Revelation places him at the end of the age. The name travels further than most readers realize.
Daniel 12:7–12
Three numbers appear in six verses of Daniel 12. Revelation adds more expressions for the same duration. Every eschatological framework builds on these — but they disagree because the text gives precise numbers without explaining their relationship.