Isaiah 2:12

12 quia dies Domini exercituum super omnem superbum et excelsum et super omnem arrogantem et humiliabitur

Isaiah 2:12 Meaning and Commentary

Isaiah 2:12

For the day of the Lord of hosts
Which is peculiarly his, which he has fixed and appointed, and in which there will be a great display of the glory of his power and grace: this

[shall be] upon every [one that is] proud and lofty, and upon every
[one that is] lifted up, and he shall be brought low;
either the day of his mighty power and efficacious grace shall be upon them to convert them; when they who thought themselves in a good estate, rich, and standing in need of nothing, shall now perceive themselves to be in a very poor, wretched, and miserable one; and when such who have trusted in and boasted of their own righteousness, and despised others, and would not submit to the righteousness of Christ; shall now renounce their own, and gladly embrace his; and when those who prided themselves with their free will, strength, and power, will now find that they can do nothing of themselves, and without Christ, his Spirit and grace; and such, who fancied that their own right hand could save them, will now see that there is salvation in no other but Christ, and will prostrate themselves before him, and seek unto him alone for peace, pardon, righteousness, and eternal life: or else this means the day of the Lord's vengeance on his proud and haughty enemies, who would not have him to reign over them; these shall be as stubble, when the day of the Lord, which will burn like an oven, will consume and destroy them, ( Malachi 4:1 ) .

Isaiah 2:12 In-Context

10 ingredere in petram abscondere fossa humo a facie timoris Domini et a gloria maiestatis eius
11 oculi sublimis hominis humiliati sunt et incurvabitur altitudo virorum exaltabitur autem Dominus solus in die illa
12 quia dies Domini exercituum super omnem superbum et excelsum et super omnem arrogantem et humiliabitur
13 et super omnes cedros Libani sublimes et erectas et super omnes quercus Basan
14 et super omnes montes excelsos et super omnes colles elevatos
The Latin Vulgate is in the public domain.