Lift ye up a banner upon the high mountain
Or "upon the mountain Nishphah"; some high mountain in Media or Persia, proper to set a standard on, or erect a banner for the gathering men together, to enlist themselves as soldiers, and so form an army to march into the land of Chaldea. Vitringa thinks there may be an allusion to the mountain Zagrius, which divides Media and Persia from Assyria, mentioned by Strabo F24. Or "upon a high mountain"; any high mountain fit for such a purpose; or "against the high mountain", as some F25 read it; meaning Babylon, called a mountain, ( Jeremiah 51:25 ) not because of its situation, for it was in a plain; but because of its eminence above other cities and states. The Targum is,
``against the city that dwells securely, lift up a sign;''a token of war, proclaim war against it, that lives at ease, and is in peace; and so the word is used in the Talmudic language, as Kimchi observes; and to this agrees Jarchi's note,
``to gather against the mountain that is quiet, and trusts in its tranquillity, lift up a banner to the nations.''Exalt the voice unto them;