The Mountain
Summary
Some of the Bible’s most foundational stories happen on mountains, from God planting Earth’s first garden on a mountain to Jesus’ famous Sermon on the Mount. As the biblical narrative unfolds, a literary mountain motif emerges, with characters like Abraham being tested on a mountain and prophets like Moses and Elijah receiving instruction or revelation from God while meeting with him at high altitudes. In the Bible, mountains are mentioned not merely as geographic settings but as sacred places where Heaven and Earth collide—where the divine presence joins humanity to provide instruction, direction, and hope for the day when all of Heaven and Earth are finally one.
The First Mountain
In ancient Israel’s imagination, the mountain is where the heavenly realm in the skies meets the human realm on land. In this place, people can access God’s wisdom and power and his very presence.
At the beginning of the Bible, God places humanity in a garden that we later discover is planted on this kind of mountain. God appoints humans to oversee the land and to fill it with his blessing. But remaining on the mountain requires choosing to trust in God’s wisdom, and as the story unfolds, humans decide to trust their own wisdom instead. As a result, they are driven from the mountain, and they fill the land with fear and violence rather than the blessing of God’s love and abundance.
Meeting God on the Mountain
Then God makes a promise to an infertile couple—Abraham and Sarah. God says he will give Sarah a son, Isaac, and through him, God will restore his blessing to all nations. Abraham is invited up the mountain to receive God’s blessing through a test, where God asks him to sacrifice Isaac. Abraham learns that the only way back up the mountain is to surrender what he calls life and to receive back the true life that God alone provides.
Over time, Abraham’s family grows into a nation of many people, and God calls them all up the mountain. But from below, they become terrified of God’s fiery presence, and only Moses ascends to receive God’s wisdom and take it back to the people. God tells them to build a moveable tent, the tabernacle, where he will meet with them. So now God’s mountain presence comes down to dwell among the people in Israel’s camp. As God’s mountain presence travels with the people, they’re invited to live according to God’s ways wherever they go.
Eventually King David establishes a city on a tall hill, and Israel’s prophets imagine that this could truly become the mountain, where a king rules with God’s perfect justice and love – a king who restores God’s blessing to all nations. But just like the original humans, Israel’s leaders and people also distrust God, do what’s right in their own eyes, and end up driven from their home.
Where Heaven and Earth Meet
So God’s mountain presence comes down, incarnating as Jesus of Nazareth to enter creation as one of us—a true human being. He teaches people to live by God’s wisdom and to generously share the abundance of God’s mountain with their neighbors, friends, and enemies.
When Jesus faces his own decision whether to trust or reject God’s wisdom, he chooses to trust, even to the point of surrendering his very life to the Father, who preserves him through death, unto resurrection. The risen Jesus becomes the new “place” where Heaven and Earth meet.
At the end of the Bible, humanity’s return to the life of God’s mountain garden has already begun with Jesus leading the way. New Testament authors describe Jesus as being enthroned on the heavenly mountain. And he invites all people to ascend—choosing God’s wisdom so that through them, God's blessing can flow out to all the land.
Dive Deeper
So far we’ve just skimmed the surface. Explore these studies to take a deeper dive into how this theme contributes to the whole story of the Bible.
Interpretive Guidance
In the ancient world, many people believed that the Earth emerged when a cosmic mountain rose out of the chaotic waters and became the ruling place of the gods. The Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) begins with God bringing land out of the chaotic waters and then planting a beautiful garden in Eden (Gen. 1:9-10, 2:8-9). This garden teems with life and is designed as a space where people can dwell in unity with God and each other (see Gen. 2:25, 3:8). Centuries later, the prophet Ezekiel metaphorically describes this life-giving “garden of God” as being located on the “mountain of God” (Ezek. 28:13-14).
So this first garden in the biblical story is also the first cosmic mountain, or the place where Heaven and Earth meet. And God makes the mountain garden a source of life for the surrounding lands, as the river of life branches out from Eden to the four corners of the Earth (Gen. 2:10-14).
God gives humans the chance to live in the mountain garden forever, but they face a test. After filling the garden with fruitful trees and encouraging the humans to eat freely from them, God directly instructs them to avoid one single tree—the tree of the knowledge of good and bad (2:16-17).
But instead of listening to God’s instruction and following his wisdom, they eat from the forbidden tree (3:1-6). Their decision to do what’s right in their own eyes brings corruption to the world around them, so God removes them from the mountain (3:7-24). But ever since, God has worked to restore humanity to that mountain top so we can find true life and flourish in his presence once again.
Interpretive Guidance
God chooses to work through Abraham’s family to restore humanity to the blessing of life on the mountain, and he promises to give Abraham many descendants (Gen. 12:1-3, here called Abram). But because Abraham’s wife Sarah (first called Sarai) is barren, they distrust God’s promise and take matters into their own hands. They do what’s right in their own eyes and use Sarah’s Egyptian slave, Hagar, to bear Abraham’s child, whom they name Ishmael (16:1-6, 15).
Abraham and Sarah’s mistreatment of Hagar results in the eventual loss of Ishmael, Abraham’s first born son (21:9-14), and it also leads to a test. God gives Abraham and Sarah the son he originally promised, born of Sarah and named Isaac (21:1-7). But then God tests Abraham by instructing him to ascend a mountain and sacrifice this long-awaited son of promise.
Unlike the humans in the garden, Abraham trusts in God’s wisdom and follows his instruction. When Abraham surrenders Isaac, God spares him, providing a ram to sacrifice in his place. After this transformative encounter with God, Abraham names the mountain site “Yahweh provides (Hebrew yir’eh)” (22:14, BP translation), recognizing Mount Moriah as a place of life and provision.
Because he relies on God’s wisdom, Abraham becomes God’s human partner, working with him to bring blessing to all the families, or nations, of the earth (see 12:2-3, 22:15-18). Through a descendant of Abraham, God will one day invite all people back up onto the mountaintop.
Interpretive Guidance
Eventually, Abraham’s descendants, the Israelites, end up enslaved in Egypt. Hearing their cries for justice, God appears to Moses in a burning bush on Mount Horeb (another name for Mount Sinai) and instructs him to return to Egypt and rescue his people (Exodus 2:23-3:9).
After miraculously delivering the Israelites, God guides them to Mount Sinai, where he makes an agreement (or “covenant”) with them. He promises that if they follow his wisdom, they will become a kingdom of priests and a holy nation. In other words, they will bring God’s presence and blessing to the whole world, fulfilling God’s promise to Abraham (Gen. 12:3).
God invites Moses and the Israelites to come up onto the mountaintop when they hear the sound of a trumpet (Exod. 19:13). But when the people see and hear God’s thundering, fiery presence, they’re afraid to ascend and instead tell Moses to go up and talk to God on their behalf (20:18–21).
On the mountaintop, God gives Moses the Ten Commandments and other laws intended to develop God’s own wisdom within the people—wisdom to trust God’s way of love and peace-making, which can bless their community and everyone around them (Exod. 20-24). But the people immediately violate God’s commands by making a golden calf idol (32:1-6). Because they’ve broken their agreement with God, Moses intervenes on their behalf, pleading with God for merciful treatment, and God renews his covenant with the people (34:27-28).
God also gives Moses the blueprint for the tabernacle, which is a tent that’s designed to mirror Eden. It’s like a mobile temple—a place where Heaven meets Earth and the divine and human realms overlap (Exod. 25-31). This tabernacle highlights God’s strong desire to be with his people. By dwelling in their midst in a portable tent, God’s mountaintop presence is brought down to go with the people wherever they travel (40:34-38).
Interpretive Guidance
After encountering God at Mount Sinai and journeying through the wilderness, the Israelites finally arrive in Canaan. This abundant promised land is an Eden-like place, where they can fulfill their purpose of blessing the entire world (Gen. 12:3).
Eventually, King Solomon replaces the portable tabernacle with a permanent temple for God built on Mount Zion in Jerusalem (1 Kgs. 6-8). So Zion becomes the new cosmic mountain where Heaven touches Earth. And 2 Chronicles 3:1 informs us that Mount Zion is another name for Mount Moriah, where God previously tested Abraham by instructing him to sacrifice Isaac.
Although the Israelites were previously too afraid to go up on Mount Sinai, now they ascend Mount Zion to worship God at the temple. But the peoples’ access to God remains restricted. Out of the whole community, only priests have permission to actually enter the presence of God in the inner courts of the temple.
God blesses and protects his people by dwelling among them on Mount Zion. The psalmist vividly portrays enemies fleeing when they see the magnificence of Jerusalem, which reflects God’s glory. To gaze upon the splendor of the temple and surrounding city is, in a sense, to see God (Ps. 48:12–14).
But the Israelites cannot receive God’s protection if they break his covenant and do what’s right in their own eyes (see Jer. 7). To enjoy God’s blessing, they must trust in his wisdom and follow his teaching.
Interpretive Guidance
When King Ahab rules over the northern kingdom of Israel, many of the people worship the Canaanite god, Baal. So Elijah challenges 450 prophets of Baal to a contest. Ascending Mount Carmel, both Elijah and the prophets of Baal prepare a sacrifice on an altar. When they pray, they will see which God sends fire to consume the sacrifice.
As a storm god it should be easy for Baal to send lightning to burn the sacrifice. But when his prophets pray, nothing happens. Elijah then pours twelve large jars of water on his sacrifice, and Yahweh miraculously sends fire to consume it, demonstrating that he is the true God. As a successful mediator, Elijah leads his people to turn back to God.
But after the showdown, Queen Jezebel threatens to kill Elijah. And he responds to this new test in fear, fleeing into the wilderness and eventually journeying to Mount Horeb (that is, Sinai). There God promises to reveal himself, “passing by” (Hebrew ‘avar) Elijah (1 Kgs. 19:11) as he had earlier “passed by” (‘avar) Moses on the same mountain (Exod. 34:6). This time God appears to Elijah not in fire or earthquake, but in a faint noise. This underwhelming experience contrasts with the mighty displays of God’s power to Moses on Mount Sinai and to Elijah and the prophets of Baal on Mount Carmel. In Elijah’s despair, God meets him on the mountain in a gentle whisper, calling him to trust in God’s wisdom for his future.
Interpretive Guidance
God intends for Mount Zion, where he dwells among his people in the temple, to be like Eden—a place of peace and security. As the Israelites follow God’s life-giving instruction, they will fulfill their calling to be a kingdom of priests (Exod. 19:4-6). Then Zion will become a haven for the nations, where they can experience his blessing (see Gen. 12:3). But Israel’s prophets lament that their people have instead filled Zion with oppression and violence (Isa. 1:21-23).
So God promises to purify and renew Zion, making it a place of justice and peace (1:25-28; 4:2-6). Zion will be raised above the other mountains, becoming the cosmic mountain, where Heaven and Earth meet. And like the “river” (Hebrew nahar) that flowed out of Eden (Gen. 2:10), now the nations will “stream” (nahar) to Zion to learn about God’s ways (Isa. 2:2-3).
In this new Eden, sorrow will turn to joy, people will enjoy the fruit of their labor (contrast Gen. 3:17-19), and even predator and prey will live in harmony. God will restore his mountaintop garden.
Interpretive Guidance
The Gospel of Matthew describes Jesus atop seven mountains:
- Mount of Testing (Matt. 4:1-11)
- Mount of Teaching (Matt. 5-7)
- Mount of Prayer (Matt. 14:23)
- Mount of Feeding (Matt. 15:29-39)
- Mount of Transfiguration (Matt. 17:1-9)
- Mount of Apocalypse (Matt. 24)
- Mount of Commission (Matt. 28:16-20)
When he faces a test on a mountain, following the biblical pattern, he demonstrates what it means to follow God’s wisdom (Matt. 4:8-10). Then he gives his most well-known teaching on a mountain (called the Sermon on the Mount), echoing Moses’ instruction at Mount Sinai (see Exod. 19-24).
Moses teaches the Israelites how to live in covenant relationship with God by following God’s torah, that is, his instruction or law. The torah is designed to create a community where everyone can flourish, including Israel’s neighbors. But Jesus goes beyond Moses’ teaching, fulfilling the torah by revealing the wisdom underneath the laws and challenging people to confront their inner attitudes and desires that can lead to harmful behavior (Matt. 5:17-48).
Like Moses, Jesus is creating a new community to live in God’s mountaintop presence. But he turns expectations upside down by declaring the good news that God’s presence is coming first to the poor, the hopeless, and the disadvantaged – not to the wealthy and powerful. God has chosen those less important in the world’s eyes to reflect his mountaintop presence to the world (Matt. 5:14-16).
Interpretive Guidance
On the fifth of the seven mountains in Matthew’s Gospel, Jesus’ face and clothes suddenly begin to shine, and Moses and Elijah appear with him. Just before this, Peter declares that Jesus is the promised Messiah (Matt. 16:16), that is, the anointed king who will restore his people. But then he rebukes Jesus for saying that he will die at the hands of his enemies (vv. 21-22). Peter expects the Messiah to slay his enemies, not be slain by them. So when Peter sees Jesus transfigured with radiant light, he is invited to recognize Jesus as God’s chosen Messiah and a prophet greater than Moses and Elijah.
Mountains are often places where leaders are tested and validated. While Moses is atop Mount Sinai receiving the torah (that is, law or instruction) from God, the Israelites make a golden calf idol—a sign that they reject Moses’ leadership and will do what’s right in their own eyes. Later, as Moses descends from the mountain, his face shines brightly, demonstrating that he is God’s chosen agent to lead Israel (Exod. 34:29-35).
Elijah’s legitimacy is also under scrutiny during his showdown with the prophets of Baal on Mount Carmel. God sends fire from the skies to consume the sacrifice, confirming Elijah as his chosen prophet.
Jesus’ transfiguration validates him as the ultimate prophet – a mediator greater than Moses and Elijah (Deut. 18:15-18). And a voice from heaven declares that he’s more than a prophet; he’s God’s beloved Son. “Son of God” is a title reserved for the messianic king (see Ps. 2:6-7). But Jesus is also God himself, revealing God’s glorious presence in human form. He is God’s mountain presence descended to earth. So Peter must decide whether to heed the words of the heavenly voice to “listen to Him” (Matt. 17:5) or continue to question his ways.
Interpretive Guidance
Hebrews 12:18-29 contrasts the earthly Mount Sinai with the heavenly Mount Zion. Seven descriptions of Mount Sinai in vv. 18-19 highlight how frightening God’s fiery appearance was to the Israelites. Even Moses was afraid of the threat God’s presence posed to the people when they turned away from his wisdom (compare v. 21 with Deut. 9:19).
But seven-plus-one descriptions of the heavenly Mount Zion in Hebrews 12:20-24 reveal it to be a greater and more accessible Mount Sinai. Just as Moses sprinkled blood on the Israelites at Mount Sinai to formalize their covenant relationship with God (Exod. 24:8), so Jesus’ blood is sprinkled on his followers as a sign of a new covenant (see Luke 22:20). Those who enter into this new covenant become part of the true Israel—God’s “firstborn” (see Exod. 4:22)—so they are “enrolled” as citizens of heaven (Heb. 12:23). And Jesus’ blood makes them “perfect” or “whole” (v. 23; from the Greek root teleio-), something the old covenant couldn’t do (10:1-18).
So the unfolding story suggests that if we join this covenant relationship with God, we don’t need to be afraid of drawing near to God’s presence on the heavenly Mount Zion. As the ultimate mediator between God and humanity, Jesus ascends the heavenly mountain and offers his blood in the cosmic holy of holies in order to make a way for us to enter God’s presence (Heb. 9:11-14, 23-28).
And we can look forward to the day when God will make all things right and bring this heavenly mountain down, uniting Heaven and Earth. As we await the fulfillment of God’s promise, Hebrews urges us to serve God faithfully by following his ways.
Frequently Asked Questions
The mountain is a complex topic and it’s understandable to still have questions. Here are some of the questions we hear most often:
Anyone who has ever stood on a mountain peak, gazing at craggy cliffs, emerald forests, and sparkling lakes, will understand what it’s like to be filled with wonder, awe, and awareness of God. We sometimes feel closer to God when we see the beauty of his creation and realize how small we are in its vast expanse. So it’s not hard to imagine why ancient people saw mountains as the meeting place of Heaven and Earth.
Getting away from distractions and having time set aside to intentionally seek God can also help us sense his presence. That’s why some people talk about “mountaintop” experiences at a spiritual retreat or church camp.
But we don’t have to go to the mountains or on a spiritual retreat to encounter God. The fiery presence of God that the Israelites saw on Mount Sinai came down to dwell among them in the tabernacle and later the temple. And after Jesus' death and resurrection, that fiery presence came to live in his people as they were filled with the Holy Spirit (Acts 2).
So we are now the place where Heaven and Earth meet. God’s mountaintop presence lives in us. Spiritual practices like prayer, meditating on the Bible, worshiping God in community, and giving generously can help us become more aware of God’s presence in our daily lives. But even when we can’t feel God’s presence, we can trust that he’s with us.
In Matthew 17:14-16, Jesus’ disciples are unable to heal a demon-possessed boy even though Jesus has given them the authority to do so (Matt. 10:1). So after Jesus casts out the demon, he implies that their way of trusting God is too limited. He says to them, “If you have faith like a mustard seed, you will say to this mountain, ‘Move from here to there,’ and it will move. And nothing will be impossible for you.” (Matt. 17:20)
Although Jesus’ disciples recognize that he is the Messiah, the promised king in the line of David (Matt 16:16), they don’t understand what kind of kingdom he has come to build or how he intends to build it. Jesus’ words here are sandwiched between two statements about the fact that he will suffer and die (Matt. 17:11-13; Matt. 17:22-23). He has not come to lead an army into Jerusalem and overthrow the Romans, as many expected the Messiah to do. Instead, Jesus works to bring God’s Kingdom to Earth as it is in Heaven.
Jesus demonstrates what God’s Kingdom looks like when he prays for his enemies – rather than responding with violence, even as they kill him (Luke 23:34) – and when he liberates people from all kinds of bondage, as he frees the boy from the oppressive demon. Such an act may seem impossible, like moving a mountain. But Jesus’ words imply that even what seems impossible can happen when it accords with God’s will and is done in faith—even the tiniest measure of faith.
This does not mean that people can simply marshal God’s power toward their own ends. And the context of the book reveals that faith is more than simply believing that God can intervene; it’s surrendering to God’s plans, just as Jesus submits to the Father’s will in the Garden of Gethsemane (Matt. 26:39). But Jesus challenges his followers to trust that the liberating power of God’s kingdom can come through them.
Jesus’ reference to the mountain may also have another layer of meaning. In the biblical imagination, mountains are places where Heaven and Earth meet. And in the larger context, “this mountain” likely refers to the mountain where Peter, James, and John experience Jesus’ divine splendor (Matt. 17:1-8). Now through Jesus, the way that Heaven touches Earth is undergoing a cosmic transformation. Jesus is God’s mountain presence come down to Earth. And he’s giving his followers the ability to bring the healing power of God’s mountain presence to the world around them.
The word “mountain” (Hebrew har) first appears in the Bible in the account of Noah and the flood. Genesis 7:19-20 describes floodwaters covering the mountains, and Genesis 8:4 tells us that Noah’s ark eventually comes to a stop on “the mountains of Ararat.”
But according to Ezekiel 28:13-14, the Garden of Eden was on “the holy mountain of God.” So when the opening pages of the Bible describe God planting a beautiful garden as a place for him to dwell with his people, that garden is on a mountain.
Moses receives the Ten Commandments (Exod. 20:1-17) on Mount Sinai ּ(Exod. 19:20; Exod. 31:18)—also known as Horeb (see Deut. 5:1-21)—which is located between the two fingers of the Red Sea.
But Moses first encounters God on Mount Sinai/Horeb in a burning bush, when God calls him to deliver his people from slavery in Egypt (Exod. 3:1-10). God explains that after the Israelites escape from Egypt, they will worship him on that same mountain (Exod. 3:12). And when Moses eventually arrives at Mount Sinai with the Israelites, God once again reveals himself in fire (Exod. 19:18). So the exodus narrative is framed by fiery divine encounters on this “mountain of God” (see Exod. 3:1; Exod. 24:13-17).
A “high place” (Hebrew bamah) is a worship site on a hill or mountain. As the Israelites prepare to enter the land of Canaan, God instructs them to destroy the high places of the Canaanites, which are devoted to other gods (Num. 33:52). Instead of offering their sacrifices at these worship sites scattered throughout the land, they are to bring their sacrifices to a central place, where God will dwell among them (Deut. 12:1-14). Coming together at a central place—the temple in Jerusalem—will unite the people in their worship of the true God so that they don’t turn aside to other gods or divide into religious factions.
But for centuries the Israelites continue to worship at the high places (see 2 Kgs. 12:3; 2 Kgs. 17:9-12), sometimes even engaging in the Canaanite practice of offering child sacrifice (Jer. 19:4-5). Although a handful of Israel’s kings try to lead their people in following God’s ways, only King Hezekiah and King Josiah make a concerted effort to destroy the high places (2 Kgs. 18:4; 2 Kgs. 23:8; compare 1 Kgs. 15:14; 1 Kgs. 22:43).
The Bible lists many mountains, both named and unnamed. Some of the most significant mountains include:
The mountain where God plants the Garden of Eden (see Ezek. 28:13-14)
Mount Ararat, where God makes a covenant with Noah and all creatures after the flood (Gen. 8-9)
Mount Moriah, where God calls Abraham to sacrifice Isaac (Gen. 22)
Mount Sinai, where God appears to Israel with thunder and lightning and enters into a covenant relationship with them (Exod. 19)
Mount Nebo, where Moses dies, just outside the promised land (Deut. 34)
Mount Zion in Jerusalem, where King Solomon builds the temple (see Ps. 48; 1 Kgs. 6-8), which is also identified with Mount Moriah (2 Chr. 3:1)
Mount Carmel, where Elijah has a showdown with the prophets of Baal (1 Kgs. 18)
The seven mountains noted in Matthew including:
The unnamed place where Jesus gives the Sermon on the Mount (Matt. 5-7)
The site of his transfiguration (Matt. 17:1-9), which is traditionally identified as Mount Tabor
The Mount of Olives, where Jesus prays in the Garden of Gethsemane before his death (Matt. 26:30-46)
The heavenly Mount Zion, which will one day come down to earth (Heb. 12:18-24; Rev. 21:1-4; Rev. 21:10)
The Hebrew word har simply means “mountain” or “mountainous region.” It’s a common word in the Hebrew Bible, appearing over 550 times. Mountains provide an important backdrop to Israel’s story because they are viewed as places where Heaven and Earth meet. In the Hebrew Bible, many of the most significant encounters between God and his people occur on mountains.
Also, the Israelites’ first and best-held settlements in the promised land were in a north-to-south mountain range west of the Jordan River valley, often called the “central hill country.” Since chariots couldn’t navigate the mountainous terrain, this region protected the Israelites from attack by bigger and stronger armies.
Jesus says in the Sermon on the Mount, “You are the light of the world. A city that is set up on a mountain is not able to be hidden.” (Matt. 5:14, BP translation) This reference to a shining city on a mountain (or “hill,” as it’s sometimes translated) recalls images from the book of Isaiah. Isaiah 2:2-4 says that one day the nations will stream to Jerusalem on Mount Zion to learn about God’s ways. And Isaiah 60:1-3 says that God’s light will shine out from Jerusalem, drawing the nations to it.
Jesus explains that these promises will be fulfilled through his followers. They will be the city on a hill, reflecting God’s light to the world around them and showing people the life that comes from following his teachings.