What does Isaiah 1:12 mean?
ESV: “When you come to appear before me, who has required of you this trampling of my courts?
NIV: When you come to appear before me, who has asked this of you, this trampling of my courts?
NASB: When you come to appear before Me, Who requires of you this trampling of My courtyards?
CSB: When you come to appear before me, who requires this from you -- this trampling of my courts?
NLT: When you come to worship me, who asked you to parade through my courts with all your ceremony?
KJV: When ye come to appear before me, who hath required this at your hand, to tread my courts?
NKJV: “When you come to appear before Me, Who has required this from your hand, To trample My courts?
Verse Commentary:
The idea in this verse seems to be that God considered the Israelites to be trespassing: stomping around in His sacred presence without reason. They came to Him with sinful hearts merely to carry out religious ritual with no intention of changing direction.

The Lord was the one who required them to come and make their offerings and bring their sacrifices. He is revealing here His intention for the sacrificial system: to represent the humility and repentance of God's people for their sin. Instead, Israel was using sacrifices and ritual as a substitute for making right choices and working to abandon their sinful practices. Their hearts remain sinful even in the act of worshiping the Lord.
Verse Context:
Isaiah 1:2–20 begins a presentation somewhat like a lawsuit against the people of Judah in Israel. The Lord will show many of the ways they have broken their covenant with Him. The people are saturated with sin. They have forsaken Him. Isaiah describes a spiritual sickness Israel refuses to treat. It will lead to their physical destruction by enemy invaders. Their offerings are meaningless because of their sinful rebellion. God calls them to stop sinning and to do good. He offers to make their sins white as snow if they repent and to consume them if they rebel.
Chapter Summary:
After identifying himself as the son of Amoz, Isaiah begins his vision from the Lord with the introduction of God's lawsuit against the people of Israel. His children are living in rebellion against Him. They are saturated in sin and have forsaken the Lord. Their spiritual sickness will lead to their destruction, though a few will be saved. Their offerings are meaningless because of their sinful lifestyles. If they repent now, they will be redeemed. If not, they will be destroyed. The Lord will restore justice to once righteous Jerusalem. All who do not repent will be consumed.
Chapter Context:
Isaiah 1 begins Isaiah's massive book of prophecy with the Lord presenting a lawsuit against His people Israel in Judah for breach of covenant. They live in rebellion against Him and are saturated in sin. They refuse to treat their spiritual illness and will be decimated by their enemies. Their offerings are meaningless. They must stop doing evil and start doing what is good. The Lord will burn off the corrupt from Jerusalem and return it to a place of justice and righteousness. Those who refuse to repent will be broken and destroyed.
Book Summary:
Isaiah is among the most important prophetic books in the entire Bible. The first segment details God's impending judgment against ancient peoples for sin and idolatry (Isaiah 1—35). The second part of Isaiah briefly explains a failed assault on Jerusalem during the rule of Hezekiah (Isaiah 36—39). The final chapters predict Israel's rescue from Babylonian captivity (Isaiah 40—48), the promised Messiah (Isaiah 49—57), and the final glory of Jerusalem and God's people (Isaiah 58—66).
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