Defeat of Og
The Lord who had already begun to give Israel the land also gave victory over Og, a powerful and intimidating king, so that Israel could take possession of the Transjordanian territory. Moses presents the conquest as an act of divine faithfulness and judgment, not merely military success. Og’s size,
Commentary
3:1 Next we set out on the route to Bashan, but King Og of Bashan and his whole army came out to meet us in battle at Edrei.
3:2 The Lord, however, said to me, “Don’t be afraid of him because I have already given him, his whole army, and his land to you. You will do to him exactly what you did to King Sihon of the Amorites who lived in Heshbon.”
3:3 So the Lord our God did indeed give over to us King Og of Bashan and his whole army and we struck them down until not a single survivor was left.
3:4 We captured all his cities at that time – there was not a town we did not take from them – sixty cities, all the region of Argob, the dominion of Og in Bashan.
3:5 All of these cities were fortified by high walls, gates, and locking bars; in addition there were a great many open villages.
3:6 We put all of these under divine judgment just as we had done to King Sihon of Heshbon – every occupied city, including women and children.
3:7 But all the livestock and plunder from the cities we kept for ourselves.
3:8 So at that time we took the land of the two Amorite kings in the Transjordan from Wadi Arnon to Mount Hermon
3:9 (the Sidonians call Hermon Sirion and the Amorites call it Senir),
3:10 all the cities of the plateau, all of Gilead and Bashan as far as Salecah and Edrei, cities of the kingdom of Og in Bashan.
3:11 Only King Og of Bashan was left of the remaining Rephaites. (It is noteworthy that his sarcophagus was made of iron. Does it not, indeed, still remain in Rabbath of the Ammonites? It is thirteen and a half feet long and six feet wide according to standard measure.)
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Historical setting and dynamics
Moses is reviewing Israel’s recent advance on the plains of Moab, east of the Jordan, just before the nation enters Canaan. Og of Bashan ruled a fortified northern Transjordanian kingdom whose cities and geography formed a real military and territorial obstacle. The passage explains Israel’s victory not as a human feat but as the Lord’s gift in fulfillment of promise. The note about Og’s iron sarcophagus/bed in Rabbath functions as a public, remembered memorial of the defeated king’s imposing stature and of the historic reality of the conquest.
Central idea
The Lord who had already begun to give Israel the land also gave victory over Og, a powerful and intimidating king, so that Israel could take possession of the Transjordanian territory. Moses presents the conquest as an act of divine faithfulness and judgment, not merely military success. Og’s size, fortifications, and remembered sarcophagus underline how complete God’s victory was.
Context and flow
This unit continues Moses’ retrospective account of Israel’s victories east of the Jordan, following the defeat of Sihon in Deuteronomy 2:26-37. It sets up the territorial summary and allocation of land in 3:12-22, where the conquered territory is assigned to Reuben, Gad, and half-Manasseh. The movement is from battle, to divine reassurance, to conquest, to a geographical summary that prepares for covenantal settlement.
Exegetical analysis
Moses recounts that Israel moved toward Bashan, where Og met them in battle at Edrei. The crucial interpretive center is verse 2: the Lord preempts fear by declaring the outcome already settled—Og, his army, and his land have been given into Israel’s hand. The narration then repeatedly attributes the victory to the Lord: “the Lord our God did indeed give over to us.” This is not a self-congratulating military report but a theological rehearsal of divine faithfulness.
The account emphasizes totality. Israel struck down the army, captured all the cities, and took the region of Argob and the whole kingdom of Og. The text stresses both the strength of the defense—high walls, gates, bars, and many open villages—and the breadth of the victory. Verse 6 uses the language of devotion to destruction for the occupied cities, including women and children. In this conquest setting, the narrator presents the action as obedience to divine judgment, not as a model for ordinary human violence. The livestock and plunder were retained, consistent with the limited spoil allowed in such campaigns.
Verses 8-10 summarize the territorial result: Israel now possesses the land of the two Amorite kings from the Arnon to Mount Hermon, with alternate names for Hermon included for wider geographic recognition. Verse 11 closes with a memorializing note about Og, the last of the Rephaim, and his iron sarcophagus or bed in Rabbath of the Ammonites. The point is not merely his size but his historical defeat: the object was still known, anchoring the story in remembered reality. The passage therefore combines military report, theological interpretation, and geographical summary to underscore that Israel’s advance is the Lord’s work from start to finish.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This passage stands at the edge of Israel’s entrance into the promised land, after the exodus and wilderness years and before the western crossing of the Jordan. The Transjordan victory is not the full inheritance of Canaan, but it is a real first installment of the land promise and a visible sign that the Lord is keeping covenant with Abraham’s descendants. It also belongs to the Mosaic order, where conquest and holy judgment are tied to Israel’s unique national calling. Later biblical hope will remember such victories as evidence that the God of promise gives rest and inheritance to his people.
Theological significance
The passage reveals God as sovereign giver, faithful covenant-keeper, and righteous judge. It shows that fear is answered by divine promise, not by human resources. It also confronts readers with the seriousness of holy judgment in Israel’s unique historical setting, where the land is being cleansed for covenant possession. At the same time, the passage teaches that remembered acts of God should become public testimony to his power and faithfulness.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
No major prophecy, typology, or symbol requires special comment in this unit. The fortified cities, the giant king, and the iron sarcophagus function as concrete narrative markers of formidable opposition and decisive divine victory, but the text does not invite speculative symbolism.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The passage uses honor-and-memory logic typical of the ancient world: a defeated king’s impressive sarcophagus, still known in a public city, serves as a durable witness to his stature and downfall. The repeated geographic names and boundary markers also reflect a concrete, territorial way of thinking, in which land is identified by recognizable borders and towns. The note about multiple names for Hermon helps the audience locate the territory in a broader regional setting.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
In its own setting, the passage testifies to the Lord’s faithfulness in giving Israel the land east of the Jordan. Later Scripture can recall the defeat of Sihon and Og as evidence of God’s enduring mercy and power, and the conquest-rest theme contributes to the larger biblical hope of settled inheritance. In the fuller canonical horizon, these victories point forward to the greater rest and final triumph secured by the Lord for his people, ultimately fulfilled in Christ, while still preserving Israel’s distinct historical role in receiving the land promise.
Practical and doctrinal implications
Believers should learn to interpret intimidating circumstances through God’s prior word rather than through visible power alone. The passage also warns that divine judgment is real and should not be domesticated. For leaders, Moses’ review models the importance of remembering and retelling God’s past acts so that present obedience rests on faith. Readers must, however, avoid treating this conquest narrative as a direct template for Christian behavior.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
The main crux is verse 11’s reference to Og’s “iron” sarcophagus or bed: the Hebrew term may be rendered differently, but the point is clear enough—an enormous memorial object known in Rabbath. Another issue is the severity of the destruction language in verses 3 and 6, which should be read in the context of divine command and the unique conquest setting rather than as a general pattern for warfare.
Application boundary note
Readers must not flatten this conquest report into a general principle for personal success, national policy, or Christian warfare. The passage belongs to Israel’s unique covenant history and must not be transferred directly to the church. Its main application is theological trust and reverent remembrance, not imitation of holy war.
Key Hebrew terms
ʾal-tîrāʾ
Gloss: do not fear
God’s command frames the battle as a test of trust in his promise rather than Israel’s military strength.
nātan
Gloss: give, hand over
The repeated gift-language emphasizes that land and victory come by Yahweh’s sovereign grant.
ḥērem
Gloss: devoted to destruction
This term marks the destruction of occupied cities as an act of holy judgment under divine command, not ordinary warfare.
rĕpāʾîm
Gloss: Rephaim
Og’s identification as the last of the Rephaim heightens the sense of his formidable stature and the completeness of Israel’s victory.
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