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Divine title (Hebrew: Yahweh Sabaoth) meaning 'LORD of armies' — emphasizing God's supreme authority over all heavenly and earthly powers. Appears twice in the closing verse of this chapter as the name to whom tribute is brought at Mount Zion.
19 mentions across 9 books
A title for God meaning 'LORD of armies' — referring to both heavenly armies of angels and the armies of Israel. Emphasizes God as the supreme commander of all cosmic and earthly forces.
The title appears here as the One whose restraint alone prevented total annihilation — the Commander of all armies preserved a remnant when the full weight of justified judgment could have wiped the nation out.
The Watchman on the WallIsaiah 21:6-10Lord of hosts is invoked here as the authoritative source behind the watchman's announcement — Isaiah is not speaking his own assessment but relaying the word of the commander of all armies.
God Reigns — And Everything Else BowsIsaiah 24:21-23Lord of hosts is the divine title that anchors the chapter's finale — the commander of all heavenly and earthly armies is the one who reigns on Mount Zion after imprisoning every rival power, making this title the perfect capstone to a chapter about universal sovereignty.
From the Throne to the DustIsaiah 47:1-4The title LORD of hosts appears here as God's war-name — emphasizing that the One pronouncing Babylon's doom commands all heavenly armies, making resistance by any earthly empire pointless.
Lord of Hosts is the divine title Jeremiah invokes when appealing his case to God — calling on the supreme commander of all heavenly armies as the one who tests hearts and will vindicate him.
The Yoke AssignmentJeremiah 27:1-4The title Lord of hosts is invoked here to establish the authority behind the yoke message — this command to submit to Babylon comes not from Jeremiah, but from the supreme commander of all armies.
Your Warriors Won't Save YouJeremiah 48:14-17The title Lord of hosts appears here as the direct counter to Moab's boast about mighty warriors — the one who actually determines military outcomes is not Moab's king but the LORD of all armies.
The God Who Actually Made ThingsJeremiah 51:15-19Lord of hosts appears here as the divine title closing the hymn — identifying the Creator of heavens and earth as the same Commander of armies who is now executing judgment on Babylon.
Lord of hosts is the climactic title delivered as the final answer to the gates' repeated question — identifying the King of Glory as the commander of all heavenly armies, whose authority is absolute.
The Kings Who FumbledPsalms 48:4-8Lord of hosts is invoked here as the divine title that explains why enemy armies failed — this is the God who commands all heavenly and earthly forces, and the city belongs to Him.
The Lord of hosts speaks the chapter's final verdict personally — the title 'LORD of armies' is deliberately chosen here to match and overwhelm Assyria's own military identity, declaring that no earthly army can stand against this commander.