You must mean the
I think in the book of Job he Leviathan is Satan. He's called the king of the children of pride (Job 41:34) and it is said of him that those who curse are ready to wake Leviathan up. (Job 3:8) Meaning he could be brought out by witchcraft. The Leviathan is a sea serpent the same as Lotan. He's a 7 headed sea serpent possibly considered by the ancient Canaanites as the aspect of Yam. Yam(the sea) pictured as a serpent encircling the earth. His little pet leviathan swimming within. The God of the Bible takes another approach. The idea that Yam is a god is contested and God cuts Rahab. Rahab is a monster that typifies the sea. When God caused the Israelites to cross the Red sea on dry land it was considered an attack against Rahab the sea. (Isaiah 51:9) This showed that God ruled the waves of the sea and could still them or part the sea or do anything. (Psalm 89:9) Even though Leviathan is invincible from human weapons (because he's really a spirit: satan). (Job 41:27) Satan is nothing to God and will be destroyed when it's time. The Zodiac shows us that God will "pierce the fleeing serpent" and slay the dragon that is in the sea. The Zodiac has been misinterpreted as being about Hercules and the hydra and many other topics of mythology etc. Many ancient myths had the Hydra as 7 headed. He's just memories of Leviathan the 7 headed dragon we know of as satan. Hercules is not Hercules. It's Jesus the "Son of man" the "seed of the woman" who would bruise the serpent's head. If you study the Zodiac, line it up with scriptures then it all makes sense. Yes the dragon satan is very real.
Turning Leviathan,-Lotan,-Tiamat,-Jörmungandr, etc., into Satan, - is again, - just later people trying to make everything "Pagan" that they consider "evil," into what they think Satan is.
The Leviathan connection to Babylon is that it is actually the fierce navy and warships.
These verses symbolically refer to those people, whom were a powerful seafaring nation, - as a
sea monster.
Isa 2:12 For the day of the LORD of hosts
shall be upon every
one that is proud and lofty, and upon every
one that is lifted up; and he shall be brought low:
Isa 2:16 And upon all the ships of Tarshish, and upon all pleasant pictures.
Isa 27:1 In that day YHVH with his severe and mighty and strong sword shall punish leviathan the piercing (fugitive)(noble) serpent, even leviathan that crooked(tortuous) serpent; and he shall slay the sea monster that
is in the sea.
Isa 27:12 And it shall come to pass in that day,
that the LORD
shall beat off from the channel of the river unto the stream of Egypt, and ye shall be gathered one by one, O ye children of Israel.
Psa 104:26 Thence
with the ships which depart for abroad, Leviathan doth make sport.
Isa 43:2 When thou passest through the waters, I
will be with thee; and through
the rivers, they shall not overflow thee: when thou walkest through the fire, thou shalt not be burned; neither shall the flame kindle upon thee.
Isa 43:14 Thus saith the LORD, your redeemer, the Holy One of Israel; For your sake
I have sent to Babylon, and have brought down all their nobles, and the Chaldeans,
whose cry is in the ships.
Isa 43:16 Thus saith the LORD,
which maketh a way in the sea, and a path in the mighty waters;
Isa 44:28 That saith
of Cyrus,
He is my shepherd, and shall perform all my pleasure: even saying to Jerusalem, Thou shalt be built; and to the temple, Thy foundation shall be laid.
Isa 48:14 All ye, assemble yourselves, and hear; which among them hath declared these
things? The LORD hath loved him:
he will do his pleasure on Babylon, and his arm shall be on the Chaldeans.
If their ships came across yours - you were in deep do-do. They/Leviathan made sport of other ships.
We are talking Phoenicians, Assyrians, Tarshish, Tyre, Babylon, - and a real war. Read Isaiah 23 carefully.
"(2.) The Chaldeans shall be the instruments of it
(Isa_23:13): Behold the land of the Chaldeans; how easily they and their land were destroyed by the Assyrians. Though their own hands
founded it, set up the towers of Babylon, and
raised up its palaces, yet the Assyrians brought it to ruin, whence the Tyrians might infer that as easily as the old Chaldeans were subdued by the Assyrians so easily shall
Tyre be vanquished by those new Chaldeans. Babel was built by the Assyrians for
those that dwelt in the wilderness. It may be rendered for the ships (the Assyrians founded it for ships and shipmen that traffic upon those vast rivers Tigris and Euphrates to the Persian and Indian seas), for men of the desert, for Babylon is called the
desert of the sea, Isa_21:1. Thus Tyrus was built upon the sea for the like purpose. But the Assyrians (says Dr. Lightfoot) brought that to ruin, now lately, in Hezekiah's time,
and so shall Tyre hereafter be brought to ruin by Nebuchadnezzar. If we looked more upon the falling and withering of others, we should not be so confident as we commonly are of the continuance of our own flourishing and standing."
Matthew Henry's Commentary On The Whole Bible
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War with Babylon is inevitable. In a single swift campaign,
Cyrus destroys the mighty kingdom. The army of King Nabonidus is defeated and
Babylon surrenders without resistance in October 539.
Soon after his conquest of the empire of the Medes, Cyrus, king of Persia, is attacked by a coalition of the other great powers of the day: Babylon, Egypt and Lyclia who come to fear him, joined by Sparta, the greatest military power of Greece. In the spring of 546 B.C. the richest and most powerful man in the world, Croesus, king of Lydia, advances into Cappadocia, Asia Minor while the other kings are still feverishly gathering their troops for battle. But Cyrus cleverly attacks first, marches one thousand miles overland, even through the outlying provinces of Babylon. He defeats Croesus and follows him to his capital city. In the autumn of 546 Cyrus storms Sardis and orders that Croesus be taken alive. The Lydian kingdom henceforth becomes a province of Persia.
The gateway to Greece and the Near East now lies open before the Persian king. The Ionian Creek cities of Asia Minor, the Carians, the Lycians and the king of Cilicia humbly acknowledge Persian supremacy.
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