Isaiah 2:14 kjv
And upon all the high mountains, and upon all the hills that are lifted up,
Isaiah 2:14 nkjv
Upon all the high mountains, And upon all the hills that are lifted up;
Isaiah 2:14 niv
for all the towering mountains and all the high hills,
Isaiah 2:14 esv
against all the lofty mountains, and against all the uplifted hills;
Isaiah 2:14 nlt
He will level all the high mountains
and all the lofty hills.
Isaiah 2 14 Cross References
Verse | Text | Reference |
---|---|---|
Isa 2:11 | The haughty eyes of man shall be humbled, and the lofty pride... | Humbling human pride |
Isa 2:12 | For the day of the Lord of hosts shall be against all that is proud... | Universal judgment on pride |
Isa 2:15 | Against every high tower, and against every fenced wall... | Judgment on human constructs of power |
Isa 2:17 | And the haughtiness of man shall be bowed down... and the Lord alone... | God alone exalted |
Isa 5:15 | So man is humbled and the spirit of the haughty is brought low... | Humbling of the proud |
Isa 13:11 | I will punish the world for its evil, and the wicked for their iniquity; I will put an end to the pomp of the arrogant, and lay low the haughtiness of the ruthless. | Divine judgment on arrogance |
Isa 40:4 | Every valley shall be lifted up, and every mountain and hill be made low. | Humbling of all physical barriers |
Prov 16:18 | Pride goes before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a fall. | Proverbial truth about pride |
Ps 75:6-7 | For exaltation comes neither from the east nor from the west... God is the Judge. | God as the source of promotion/humbling |
Ps 97:5 | The mountains melted like wax before the Lord... | God's power over creation |
Zech 4:7 | Who are you, O great mountain? Before Zerubbabel you shall become a plain. | Spiritual mountains brought low |
Job 40:11-12 | Pour out the overflowings of your anger; look on everyone who is proud, and bring him low. | God challenging Job regarding His power |
Luke 1:51-52 | He has scattered the proud in the thoughts of their hearts. He has brought down the mighty from their thrones... | Mary's Magnificat: God's work of humbling |
Luke 14:11 | For everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, and he who humbles himself will be exalted. | Principle of humility vs. pride |
Jas 4:6 | God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble. | New Testament teaching on humility |
1 Pet 5:5 | Clothe yourselves, all of you, with humility toward one another, for God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble. | NT command for humility |
Hos 4:13 | They sacrifice on the tops of the mountains and burn offerings on the hills. | Idolatry on high places condemned |
Deut 12:2 | You shall surely destroy all the places where the nations whom you shall dispossess served their gods, on the high mountains... | Command to destroy idolatrous high places |
Mic 1:4 | And the mountains will melt under him and the valleys will split apart... | Divine judgment impacting nature |
Nah 1:5 | The mountains quake before him; the hills melt... | God's powerful presence |
Rom 12:3 | For by the grace given to me I say to everyone among you not to think of himself more highly than he ought to think... | Call to humility in thought |
Isaiah 2 verses
Isaiah 2 14 Meaning
Isaiah 2:14 describes God's coming judgment upon everything that is elevated and self-exalted, symbolized by high mountains and towering hills. These natural formations represent not only physical prominences but metaphorically stand for human pride, arrogance, societal structures, and institutions that elevate themselves above God or rely on their own strength, rather than Him. The verse underscores the comprehensive nature of this divine humbling, extending to every high and lifted thing.
Isaiah 2 14 Context
Isaiah chapter 2 begins with a glorious prophecy of Jerusalem as the future center of divine law and universal peace. However, it quickly pivots to a stark contrast, indicting Judah and Jerusalem for their profound sin, particularly their pride, idolatry, and reliance on material wealth and military strength. The subsequent verses (6-9) detail their widespread idolatry and self-sufficiency. Verses 10-18 then outline the coming "Day of the Lord," a day of dreadful judgment when all human pride and everything high and lifted up—symbolized by various lofty objects and constructs like cedars, oaks, towers, walls, ships, and delightful imagery—will be brought low. Isaiah 2:14 specifically targets natural eminences—mountains and hills—to emphasize the comprehensiveness of this judgment on anything that stands out in height and implicitly in haughtiness. This judgment is meant to clear the way for God alone to be exalted.
Isaiah 2 14 Word analysis
- And upon all (
וְעַל כָּל־
-ve'al kol
):וְ
(ve
): "And." A simple conjunction, connecting this phrase to the broader scope of judgment outlined from Isa 2:10 onward, particularly building on the theme of everything lofty being humbled.עַל
(al
): "Upon" or "over." Denotes the direct application of judgment to these entities.כָּל־
(kol
): "All" or "every." This particle signifies the absolute and comprehensive nature of the judgment. It leaves no exception; everything fitting the description is included. This emphasizes the totality of God's reach in judgment, targeting every instance of human or natural exaltation.
- the high mountains (
הֶהָרִים הָרָמִים
-heharim haramim
):הֶהָרִים
(heharim
): "The mountains." Refers to mountains, which in the ancient Near East often symbolized permanence, strength, and were frequently sites of pagan worship (high places). They are literal features of the landscape but carry symbolic weight.הָרָמִים
(haramim
): "The high" or "the lofty/proud." This is a participle from the rootרום (rum)
, meaning "to be high," "to rise," or "to be exalted." While literally describing height, in biblical context,rum
very frequently carries connotations of arrogance, haughtiness, and pride (e.g., Ps 131:1, Prov 16:18). Therefore, "high mountains" here is not just descriptive of elevation but imbued with the sense of a proud or self-exalting attitude, characteristic of what God will bring low.
- and upon all (
וְעַל כָּל־
-ve'al kol
):- Repetition for emphasis, similar to the initial phrase, underscoring the universal extent of the judgment.
- the hills that are lifted up (
הַגְּבָעוֹת הַנִּשָּׂאֹות
-hageva'ot hannissa'ot
):הַגְּבָעוֹת
(hageva'ot
): "The hills." Hills are smaller than mountains but still represent elevated land. Their inclusion shows that the judgment applies not only to the greatest forms of pride (mountains) but also to lesser forms (hills), making the humbling pervasive.הַנִּשָּׂאֹות
(hannissa'ot
): "The lifted up" or "the exalted." This is a passive participle from the rootנשׂא (nasa)
, meaning "to lift," "to carry," or "to bear." Similar toרום (rum)
,nasa
in a heightened or exalted sense can also imply arrogance or self-exaltation (e.g., Ez 28:2). Thus, "hills that are lifted up" further reinforces the theme of anything physically or metaphorically elevated through human pride facing divine reckoning.
Words-Group Analysis:
- "upon all the high mountains, and upon all the hills that are lifted up": This phrase employs parallelism (high mountains/hills; high/lifted up) to expand and intensify the imagery. It utilizes concrete geographical features as symbols for all forms of human loftiness, arrogance, and any human construct or attitude that opposes God's supreme authority. The use of "all" twice further stresses the comprehensive nature of this judgment. It signifies God's intention to humble everything that stands tall, whether naturally majestic or humanly constructed with a spirit of pride. The consistent choice of words like
haramim
(high/proud) andhannissa'ot
(lifted up/exalted) imbues these natural features with human-like pride, making them powerful metaphors for the sinful arrogance of mankind which will face God's inescapable wrath.
Isaiah 2 14 Bonus section
The repetitive use of "all" in verses 12-16 (e.g., all that is proud and lofty, all the cedars of Lebanon, all the oaks of Bashan, all the high mountains, all the high towers, all the fenced walls) creates an overwhelming sense of totality and inescapability for the coming judgment. The selection of various lofty objects—from nature's grandest (mountains, trees) to human constructions (towers, walls, ships)—demonstrates that the scope of divine reckoning encompasses every realm of human existence where pride manifests. This detailed catalog reinforces the point: there will be no safe haven for pride. The imagery not only anticipates the historical fulfillment in the fall of nations but also projects forward to the eschatological Day of the Lord when all ungodly power and human self-exaltation will definitively be brought to nothing.
Isaiah 2 14 Commentary
Isaiah 2:14 serves as a potent symbolic statement within Isaiah's prophecy of judgment against Judah's pride and idolatry. By targeting "all the high mountains, and upon all the hills that are lifted up," the prophet conveys the universal and absolute nature of God's coming humiliation of anything that exalts itself. These elevated natural features, often venerated in pagan cultures as "high places" for worship or admired for their immovability, here become figures for human arrogance, self-reliance, and any institution or ideology that rises up in defiance of God's sovereignty. The imagery underscores that no height, whether natural or metaphorical, can withstand the purifying fire of divine judgment. This is part of a larger theme in Isaiah 2, where "the Day of the Lord" brings low all human loftiness, leading to God alone being exalted. This comprehensive humbling is necessary for people to abandon their idols and self-sufficiency, turning back to the Lord as the only true source of security and power.