For thou hast said in thine heart, I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars of God: I will sit also upon the mount of the congregation, in the sides of the north:
13. the mount of the congregation, in the sides of the north ] Render: the Mount of Assembly in the uttermost north. We have here apparently an allusion to Babylonian mythology which is partly elucidated by Assyrian inscriptions. There the chief gods are spoken of as born in “the house of the mountain-summit of the lands, the mountain of Aralu ” (Schrader, Cuneif. Inscr., ad loc.). The conception is very obscure, and it has not been proved that the Babylonians located their world-mountain in the north (like the Hindus and Persians). According to Jensen ( Kosmologie der Babylonier, pp. 201 ff.) the idea of the “world-mountain” originated in the conception that the earth is itself a huge hollow mountain, resting on the primeval ocean. However that may be, there is little room for doubt that the “mount of assembly” in this verse is the mountain of Aralu where the great gods assemble. The opinion once prevalent that Zion is denoted was suggested by a similar phrase in Psa 48:2; but the idea is obviously out of place in the present context.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
13, 14. Not content with his exalted position the king aspired to equality of rank with the great gods. A similar impiety had already been put by Ezekiel into the mouth of the prince of Tyre (Eze 28:2; Eze 28:6; Eze 28:9; Eze 28:14).
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
For thou hast said in thine heart – It was thy purpose or design.
I will ascend into heaven – Nothing could more strikingly show the arrogance of the monarch of Babylon than this impious design. The meaning is, that he intended to set himself up as supreme; he designed that all should pay homage to him; be did not intend to acknowledge the authority of God. It is not to be understood literally; but it means that he intended not to acknowledge any superior either in heaven or earth, but designed that himself and his laws should be regarded as supreme.
Above the stars of God – The stars which God has made. This expression is equivalent to the former that he would ascend into heaven.
I will sit also upon the mount of the congregation – The word rendered congregation moed from yaad to fix, appoint), properly means a fixed or definite time; then an appointed place of meeting; then a meeting itself; an assembly, a congregation. What is referred to here it is difficult to determine. The Septuagint renders it, On a high mountain, on the lofty regions which lie to the north. The Chaldee, I will sit in the mount of covenant, in the regions of the north. Grotius supposes that when the king of Babylon said he would ascend into heaven, he meant the land of Judea, which was called heaven because it was dedicated to God; that when he said be would ascend above the stars, he meant to denote those who were learned in the law; that by the mount of the congregation, he meant mount Moriah where was the temple; and that by the side of the north, he meant mount Zion, which, he says, was on the north of Jerusalem. It is remarkable that the usually accurate Grotius should have fallen into this error, as mount Zion was not on the north of Jerusalem, but was south of mount Moriah. Vitringa defends the same interpretation in the main, but supposes that by the mount of the congregation is meant mount Zion, and by the sides of the north; is meant mount Moriah lying north of Zion. He supposes that mount Zion is called the mount of the congregation, not because the congregation of Israel assembled there, but because it was the appointed place where God met his people, or where he manifested himself to them, and appeals to the following places where the word which is here lrcndered congregation is applied, in various forms, to the manifestation which God thus made Exo 25:22; Exo 29:42-43; Psa 74:8. So Lowth supposes that it refers to the place where God promised to meet with his people Exo 25:22; Exo 29:42-43, and to commune with them, and translates it the mount of the divine presence. But to this interpretation there are great objections:
(1) The terms here employed the mount of the congregation, the sides of the north, are not elsewhere applied to mount Zion, and to mount Moriah.
(2) It does not correspond with the evident design of the king of Babylon. His object was not to make himself master of Zion and Moriah, but it was to exalt himself above the stars; to be elevated above all inferior beings; and to be above the gods.
(3) It is a most forced and unnatural interpretation to call the land of Judea heaven, to speak of it as being above the stars of God, or as above the heights of the clouds; and it is clear that the king of Babylon had a much higher ambition, and much more arrogant pretensions, than the conquest of what to him would be the comparatively limited province of Judea.
However important that land appeared to the Jews as their country and their home; or however important it was as the place of the solemnities of the true religion, yet we are to remember that it had no such consequence in the eyes of the king of Babylon. He had no belief in the truth of the Jewish religion, and all Judea compared with his other vast domains would appear to be a very unimportant province. It is evident, therefore, I think, that the king of Babylon did not refer here to Judea, or to Zion. The leading idea of his heart, which ought to guide our interpretation, was, that he designed to ascend in authority over all inferior beings, and to be like the Most High. We are to remember that Babylon was a city of idolatry; and it is most probable that by the mount of the congregation, in the sides of the north, there is reference to a belief prevalent in Babylon that the gods had their residence on some mountain of the north.
This was a common opinion among the ancients. The Hindus call that mountain Meru; the Persians, who are followers of Zoroaster, Al Bordsch; the Arabs, Kafe; and the Greeks, Olympus. The common opinion was that this mountain was in the center of the world, but the Hindoos speak of it as to the north of themselves in the Himalaya regions; the followers of Zoroaster in the mountains of Caucasus, lying to the north of their country; and the Greeks speak of Olympus, the highest mountain north of them in Thessaly. The Hindoo belief is thus referred to by Ward: In the book of Karma-Vipaka, it is said that the heavenly Vishnu, Brahma, and Siva, are upon the three peaks of the mountain Su-Meru, and that at the foot of this mountain are the heavens of twenty-one other gods. (View of the History, Literature, and Religion of the Hindoos, vol. i. p. 13.) So Wilford, in a Treatise on the mountain Caucasus, in the Asiatic Researches, vol. vi. p. 488, says, The Hindoos regard the mountain Meru as the dwelling-place of the gods.
In the Puranas it is said, that upon the mountain Meru there is eternal day, for a space of fourteen degrees around the mountain Su-Meru, and consequently eternal night for the same space on the opposite side; so the Hindoos are constrained to admit that Su-Meru is directly upon the top of the shadow of the earth, and that from the earth to that peak there is a vast cone-formed hill, dense as other earthly bodies, but invisible, impalpable, and impassable by mortals. On the side of this hill are various abodes, which, the higher one ascends, become the more beautiful, and which are made the dwellings of the blessed, according to the degrees of their desert. God and the most exalted of the divine beings have their abodes on the sides of the north, and on the top of this mountain. According to the Zendavesta, the Al Bordsch is the oldest and the highest of the mountains; upon that is the throne of Ormuzd, and the assemblage of the heavenly spirits (Feruer; see Rosenmuller, Alterthumskunde, vol. i. pp. 154-157).
Thus in Babylon, some of the mountains north in Armenia may have been supposed to be the special dwelling-place of the gods. Such a mountain would appear to be under the north pole, and the constellations would seem to revolve around it. It is not improbable that the Aurora Borealis, playing often as it does in the north with special magnificence, might have contributed to the belief that this was the special abode of the gods. Unable to account – as indeed all moderns are – for these special and magnificent lights in the north, it accorded with the poetic and mythological fancy of the ancients to suppose that they were designed to play around, and to adorn the habitation of the gods. This disposition to make the mountains of the north the seat of the gods, may have arisen also in part from the fact that the country on the north of Babylon was a volcanic region, and that the light emitted from volcanoes was an appropriate manifestation of the glory of superior invisible beings. On the borders of the Caspian (Sea), in the country around the Bakir, there is a tract called The Field of Fire, which continually emits inflammable gas, while springs of naphtha and petroleum occur in the same vicinity, as also mud volcanoes.
In the chain of Elburs, to the south of this sea, is a lofty mountain, which, according to Morier, sometimes emits smoke, and at the base of which there are several craters where sulphur and saltpetre are procured in sufficient abundance to be used in commerce. (Lyells Geology, vol. i. p. 297.) We find some trades of these ideas in the Scriptures. The north is often mentioned as the seat of the whirlwind, the storm, and especially as the residence of the cherubim. Thus in Ezekiels vision of the cherubim, the whole magnificent scene is represented as coming from the north – as if the appropriate abode of the cherubim:
I looked, and lo! a whirlwind from the north
Came sweeping onward, a vast cloud that rolled
In volumes, charged with gleaming fire, along,
And east its splendors all around.
Brow from within shone forth, what seemed the glow
Of gold and silver molten in the flame,
And in the midst thereof the form expressed,
As of a fourfold living thing – a shape
That yet contained the semblance of a man.
Eze 1:4-5, trans. in Marshs Herder.
Thus, in Eze 28:14, Tyre is said to be the anointed cherub that covereth, and to have been upon the holy mountain of God, or the gods – evidently meaning, not Zion, but some mountain in the vicinity of Eden (see Isa 14:13). Thus also, in Zec 6:1-8, four chariots are represented as coming out of the mountains, the first chariot with red horses, the second with black horses, the third with white horses, and the fourth with bay horses. The horses that have gone through the earth are Isa 14:8 represented as going to the north as their place of rest. These passages, particularly the one from Ezekiel, show that the northern regions were regarded as the seat of striking and special manifestations of the divine glory (compare Job 23:9, note; Job 37:22, note). And it is probable that, in the view of the Babylonians, the northern mountains of Armenia, that seemed to be near the north pole, around which the constellations revolved, and that appeared to be surmounted and encompassed by the splendid light of the Aurora Borealis, were regarded as the special place where the gods held their assemblies, and from where their power went forth through the nations. Over all their power it was the intention of the king of Babylon to ascend, and even to rise above the stars that performed their revolutions around the seats of the gods in the north; to be supreme in that assembly of the gods, and to be regarded there as the supreme and incontrollable director of even all the gods. It is probable, says Mitford (Life of Milton, vol. i. p. 73), that from this scarcely intelligible hint Milton threw up his palace for his fallen angels: thus:
At length into the limits of the north
They came, and Satan to his royal seat,
High on a hill, far blazing as a mount
Raised on a mount, with pyramids and towers,
From diamond quarries hewn, and rocks of gold.
The palace of great Lucifer, so call
That structure in the dialect of men
Interpreted; which not long after he
Affecting an equality with God,
In imitation of that mount, whereon
Messiah was declared in sight of heaven,
The mountain of the congregation called, etc.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Verse 13. I will ascend into heaven] I will get the empire of the whole world. I will exalt my throne above the stars of God – above the Israelites, who are here termed the stars of God. So the Targum of Jonathan, and R. D. Kimchi. This chapter speaks not of the ambition and fall of Satan, but of the pride, arrogance, and fall of Nebuchadnezzar.
The mount of the congregation – “The mount of the Divine Presence”] It appears plainly from Ex 25:22, and Ex 29:42-43, where God appoints the place of meeting with Moses, and promises to meet with him before the ark to commune with him, and to speak unto him; and to meet the children of Israel at the door of the tabernacle; that the tabernacle, and afterwards the door of the tabernacle, and Mount Zion, (or Moriah, which is reckoned a part of Mount Zion,) whereon it stood, was called the tabernacle, and the mount of convention or of appointment; not from the people’s assembling there to perform the services of their religion, (which is what our translation expresses by calling it the tabernacle of the congregation,) but because God appointed that for the place where he himself would meet with Moses, and commune with him, and would meet with the people. Therefore har moed, the “mountain of the assembly,” or ohel moed, the “tabernacle of the assembly,” means the place appointed by God, where he would present himself; agreeably to which I have rendered it in this place, the mount of the Divine Presence.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
I will ascend into heaven; I will advance myself above the state of a weak and mortal man. Great monarchs are easily induced, by their own vain imaginations, and the flattery of their courtiers, to entertain an opinion of their own divinity; so far that many of them have received and required Divine worship to be paid to them. Above the stars of God; either,
1. Above all other kings and potentates whom he hath set up; or,
2. Above the most eminent persons of Gods church and people, who are frequently called stars, as Dan 8:10; Rev 1:16,20; 12:1, which sense the next words favour.
I will sit also upon the mount of the congregation; I will establish my royal throne upon Mount Zion, where the Jews meet together to worship God.
In the sides of the north: this is added as a more exact description of the place of the temple, which stood upon Mount Moriah, which was northward from the hill of Zion strictly so called, and was a part of the hill of Zion largely so called. See on Psa 48:2.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
13. above . . . GodIn Da8:10, “stars” express earthly potentates. “Thestars” are often also used to express heavenly principalities(Job 38:7).
mount of the congregationtheplace of solemn meeting between God and His people in thetemple at Jerusalem. In Dan 11:37;2Th 2:4, this is attributed toAntichrist.
sides of the northnamely,the sides of Mount Moriah on which the temple was built; northof Mount Zion (Ps 48:2).However, the parallelism supports the notion that the Babylonian kingexpresses himself according to his own, and not Jewish opinions (soin Isa 10:10) thus “mountof the congregation” will mean the northern mountain(perhaps in Armenia) fabled by the Babylonians to be the commonmeeting-place of their gods. “Both sides” imply theangle in which the sides meet; and so the expression comes tomean “the extreme parts of the north.” So the Hindusplace the Meru, the dwelling-place of their gods, in the north, inthe Himalayan mountains. So the Greeks, in the northernOlympus. The Persian followers of Zoroaster put the Ai-bordsch in theCaucasus north of them. The allusion to the stars harmonizes withthis; namely, that those near the North Pole, the region ofthe aurora borealis (compare see on Job23:9; Job 37:22) [MAURER,Septuagint, Syriac].
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
For thou hast said in thine heart,…. Which shows the pride and haughtiness that were in his heart; and were the cause and reason of his fall, for pride goes before a fall; it was the cause of the fall of angels, and of Adam, and of many kings and kingdoms; see
Pr 16:18 with this compare Re 18:7:
I will ascend into heaven; be above all men, rule over the whole world; and so the Targum.
“I will ascend on high;”
unless by it is meant the temple at Jerusalem, where Jehovah dwelt, an emblem of heaven, to which sense the following clauses incline; and so the Romish antichrist sits in the temple of God, and on his throne as if he was God, 2Th 2:4.
I will exalt my throne above the stars of God; which he has made and set in the heavens, and preserves; meaning either the angels,
Job 38:7 or rather the kings and princes of the earth, over whom he placed himself, having subdued them under him. It may be applied to ecclesiastical persons, pastors, and bishops of churches, compared to stars, Re 1:20 the third part of which the dragon drew with his tail, Re 12:4 and over whom the bishop of Rome has usurped an universal dominion. The Targum is,
“over the people of God I will put the throne of my kingdom;”
notoriously true of the man of sin:
I will sit also upon the mount of the congregation, in the sides of the north: that is, as some think, in the temple where the tribes of Israel gathered together for worship, which was built upon Mount Zion; which, as Kimchi says, lay north of Jerusalem; see Ps 48:2 so the tabernacle is often called the tabernacle of the congregation; but, as Cocceius and Vitringa observe, Mount Zion was not to the north, but to the south of Jerusalem; wherefore not that mount, but Mount Moriah, which was to the north of Mount Zion, is designed; however, not Babylon is here meant, as R. Joseph Kimchi thought; called, as he supposes, “the mount of the congregation”, because all the world were gathered thither to the king of Babylon; and a “mount”, because a strong city; and said to be “in the sides of the north”, because it lay north east to the continent; but, as one observes, he had no need to boast of sitting there, where he was already. Jarchi thinks the last clause refers to the north side of the altar, in the court, where the sacrifice was killed, Le 1:11 and may point at the seat of the Romish antichrist, and the sacerdotal power usurped by him, to offer sacrifice for the sins of men, particularly the bloodless sacrifice of the Mass.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
“And thou, thou hast said in thy heart, I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars of God, and sit down on the mount of the assembly of gods in the corner of the north. I will ascend to the heights of the clouds, I will make myself like the Most High. Nevertheless, thou wilt be cast down into the region of the dead, into the corner of the pit.” An antithetical circumstantial clause commences with v e attah , just as in Isa 14:19, “whilst thou,” or “whereas thou.” The har hammoed (mount of assembly) cannot be Zion, as is assumed by Schegg and others, who are led astray by the parallel in Psa 48:3, which has been entirely misunderstood, and has no bearing upon this passage at all. Zion was neither a northern point of the earth, nor was it situated on the north of Jerusalem. The prophet makes the king of Babylon speak according to the general notion of his people, who had not the seat of the Deity in the midst of them, as the Israelites had, but who placed it on the summit of the northern mountains, which were lost in the clouds, just as the Hindus place it on the fabulous mountains of Kailasa , which lie towards the north beyond the Himalayas (Lassen, i. 34ff.). (with an aspirated in a loosely closed syllable) are the two sides into which a thing parts, the two legs of an angle, and then the apex at which the legs separate. And so here, (with an unaspirated Caph in a triply closed syllable) is the uttermost extremity of the north, from which the northern mountains stretch fork-like into the land, and yarcethe – bor the interior of the pit into which its two walls slope, and from which it unfolds or widens. All the foolhardy purposes of the Chaldean are finally comprehended in this, “ I will make myself like the Most High; ” just as the Assyrians, according to Ctesias, and the Persians, according to the Persae of Aeschylus, really called their king God, and the Sassanidae call themselves bag, Theos , upon coins and inscriptions ( ‘eddammeh is hithpael, equivalent to ‘ethdammeh , which the usual assimilation of the preformative Tav : Ges. 34, 2, b). By the in Psa 48:14, the high-flying pride of the Chaldean is contrasted with his punishment, which hurls him down into the lowest depths. , which was originally affirmative, and then restrictive (as rak was originally restrictive and then affirmative), passes over here into an adversative, just as in Psa 49:16; Job 13:15 (a change seen still more frequently in ); nevertheless thou wilt be hurled down; nothing but that will occur, and not what you propose. The prophetic turad is language that neither befits the inhabitants of Hades, who greet his advent, nor the Israel singing the mashal ; but the words of Israel have imperceptibly passed into words of the prophet, who still sees in the distance, and as something future, what the mashal commemorates as already past.
Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament
13. Yet thou saidst in thy heart. These words must be connected with what goes before. To say means here, according to the custom of the Hebrew language, to resolve in one’s own mind. The Prophet ridicules the pride of the Babylonian monarch, who, relying on his greatness, ventured to promise to himself uninterrupted success, as if he had the power of determining the events of his life. In him there is exhibited to us a mirror of the madness of pride with which ungodly men are swelled, and which sometimes they even vomit out. Nor ought we only to behold here the person of a single tyrant, but the blasphemous rage of all the ungodly, who form their resolutions as if they could dispose of everything according to their pleasure; as their plans are also beautifully described by James,
We shall go into that city, we shall transact business, we shall make gain, though at the same time they know not what to-morrow shall bring. (Jas 4:13.)
They do not consider that they are in the hands of God, but believe that they will do everything by their own ability.
I will ascend into heaven. In these words, and those which immediately follow, the boasting is so absurd that it is impossible to believe that they proceeded from the lips of a mortal man; but as the Prophet did not intend to quote the very words which Nebuchadnezzar employed, let us be satisfied with examining the subject itself. Undoubtedly, all who claim for themselves more than human nature will allow, may be said to “attack heaven itself after the manner of the giants,” as the proverb runs. (222) Hence it follows that whatever they undertake will be destructive to them; more especially every one who goes beyond the limits of his calling provokes the wrath of God against himself by his rashness. Let every one therefore be satisfied with his lot, and learn not to aim at anything higher, but, on the contrary, to remain in his own rank in which God has placed him. If God stretch out his hand, and lift us up higher, we ought to go forward; but no one ought to take it on himself, or to strive for it from his own choice. And even those who are raised to a higher rank of honor ought to conduct themselves humbly and submissively, not with any pretended modesty, but with minds so thoroughly depressed that nothing can lift them up.
I will sit on the mountain of the testimony, (223) on the sides of the north. This plainly shows the reason why the Prophet especially accuses the Babylonian tyrant of so great madness, and what the Prophet means by such figures. He desired to sit on the mountain of the testimony. By this effrontery he attempted to make himself equal to God. Though he reasoned, after the manner of men, that he could obtain a victory over the Jews, yet, reckoning as nothing the assistance of God, by whom he had often heard that they were protected, it was as if he had endeavored to destroy the very heavens. For Mount Zion he uses the expression the sides of the north, according to the description,
Mount Zion, on the sides of the north, (224) the city of the great King. (Psa 48:2.)
He had formerly called it the mountain of the testimony. This word is derived from יעד, ( yagnad;), which signifies to unite, to assemble, and to be agreed. On this account מועד ( mogned) signifies both an assembly and an appointed day; and, in a word, it may relate to time, place, and persons. But here I prefer to view it as a Covenant; for the Lord, speaking by Moses, calls the Tabernacle מועד, ( mogned,) and says, I will meet with you there. (Exo 25:21.) Let us not think, therefore, that it means an assembly of men, as when irreligious persons assemble to their fairs or festivals, but that the Lord intended to give a token of his presence, and there to ratify his covenant. This ought to be carefully observed; for the blasphemy of the wicked king is proved by this, that he attacked heaven itself rather than an earthly place.
(222) Bogus footnote
(223) Bogus footnote
(224) Bogus footnote
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(13) I will ascend into heaven.The boast of the Chaldan king is represented as nothing less than an apotheosis, which they themselves claimed. So Shalmaneser describes himself as a sun-god (Records of the Past, iii. 83), Assurbanipal as lord of all kings (ib., iii. 78). In contrast with the Sheol into which the Chaldan king had sunk, the prophet paints the heaven to which he sought to rise. He, the brightest star, would raise his throne above all the stars of God.
I will sit also upon the mount of the congregation . . .The words have often been interpreted of Jerusalem or the Temple, as the mountain of assembly (as the tabernacle was the tent of the congregation, or of meeting), and the sides (better, recesses) of the north have been connected, like the same phrase in Psa. 48:2, with the portion of the Temple which the king of Babylon is supposed to threaten. Most modern scholars are, however, agreed that this interpretation is untenable. What is brought before us is the heaven, the mountain of assembly, where the great gods in whom the king of Babylon believed sat in council. So Assyrian hymns speak of the feasts of the silver mountains, the heavenly courts (as the Greeks spoke of Olympus), where the gods dwell eternally (Records of the Past, iii. 133). And this ideal mountain was for them, like the Meru of Indian legend, in the farthest north. So in the legendary geography of Greece, the Hyperborei, or people beyond the north wind, were a holy and blessed race, the chosen servants of Apollo (Herod., ii. 32-36). In Eze. 28:14 the prophet recognises an ideal mountain of God of like nature, and the vision of the future glory of a transfigured Zion, in chap 2:1-3, implies, as we have seen, an idea of the same kind. Possibly the same thought appears in Ezekiels vision, out of the north (Isa. 1:4).
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
13. Ascend into heaven Or, I will climb the heaven. Perhaps an allusion to the old time tower of Babel. Gen 11:4.
Above the stars of God The Babylonians connected the several constellations with minor kingdoms over which they claimed dominion.
Mount of the congregation Two interpretations have been given to these words. One is, that the mountains of Jerusalem are meant, and that the great eastern world-kingdom strove long to make there its dominion complete. The other is, a reputed widespread eastern notion of a very high mountain in the far north, where gods were believed to reside, as in northern Greece they were thought to have their abode on Mount Olympus. The one makes the words to come as the prophet’s own; the other, as quoted (not endorsed) by the prophet as from the king’s mouth. The latter accords with facts of the Eastern theology as found in the old Zend books, and may be the true explanation. And it more easily explains the remaining words of the verse.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Isa 14:13 For thou hast said in thine heart, I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars of God: I will sit also upon the mount of the congregation, in the sides of the north:
Ver. 13. For thou hast said in thine heart. ] The natural heart is a palace of satanical pride; it is like unto the table of Adonibezek, at which he sat in a chair of state, and made others, even kings, to eat meat like dogs under his feet, with their thumbs cut off.
I will ascend into heaven.
Above the stars of God,
I will sit also upon the mount of the congregation.
In the sides of the north.
a Oecolamp.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
For = And.
hast said = saidst.
ascend = mount up.
heaven = the heavens.
mount of the congregation. Not Zion, but the Divine assembly of judgment. Compare Psa 75:2; Psa 82:1. Eze 28:12-14.
sides = recesses. Same word as in Isa 14:16; Isa 37:24, and 1Sa 24:3. Eze 32:23.
the north. This helps us to localize the dwelling place of God. No “Semitic conception”, but Divine revelation of Him Who knows what Satan “said in his heart”. Compare Psa 75:6. Job 26:7.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
thou: Isa 47:7-10, Eze 27:3, Eze 28:2, Eze 29:3, Dan 4:30, Dan 4:31, Zep 2:15, Rev 18:7, Rev 18:8
I will ascend: Eze 28:9, Eze 28:12-16, Dan 8:10-12
the mount: Isa 2:2, Psa 48:2
Reciprocal: Deu 7:17 – thou shalt 1Ki 12:15 – that he might 2Ki 19:22 – exalted thy voice Job 20:6 – his excellency Psa 10:2 – The wicked Isa 26:5 – bringeth Isa 37:23 – against whom Isa 47:1 – there is Jer 49:16 – though Jer 50:29 – for she hath Jer 50:32 – the most proud Eze 31:2 – Whom Eze 31:10 – and his Eze 40:2 – on the south Dan 7:4 – lifted Dan 11:36 – exalt Dan 11:37 – regard Dan 11:45 – in the Amo 9:2 – climb Oba 1:3 – saith Mat 11:23 – which art Luk 10:15 – which 2Th 2:4 – and exalteth 1Pe 5:8 – as Rev 11:12 – And they
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
14:13 For thou hast said in thy heart, I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars of God: I will sit also upon the mount of the congregation, in the sides of the {i} north:
(i) Meaning, Jerusalem of which the temple was of the north side, Psa 48:2 .