Gaza, Philistia, and Amalek: Why Three-Thousand-Year-Old Names Don’t Mean What People Think
A look at how one small biblical prophecy against ancient Gaza opens onto names that keep getting invoked in twenty-first-century arguments — and why most of those invocations don’t hold up historically.
A look at how one small biblical prophecy against ancient Gaza opens onto names that keep getting invoked in twenty-first-century arguments — and why most of those invocations don’t hold up historically.
When people argue over Gaza today, they sometimes reach for names that are three thousand years old — Philistia, Amalek, Palestine — as though they all refer to the same people. They don’t. Untangling them doesn’t resolve any modern political dispute, but it does clear away a layer of confusion that sits underneath several of them.
Tucked into the minor prophets is a short, easy-to-miss oracle: Zephaniah 2:4–7. Zephaniah prophesied under King Josiah of Judah in the late 7th century BCE, and this passage sits inside a larger run of judgments against Judah’s neighbors — Philistia, Moab, Ammon, Cush, Assyria — before the book turns back to Judah’s own reckoning.

























































