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How Well Do You Know Isaiah 1-4? Take the Quiz!

Test Your Skills with Our Isaiah Verses Bible Chapter Quiz!

Editorial: Review CompletedCreated By: Tetteh OtuteyeUpdated Aug 28, 2025
Difficulty: Moderate
2-5mins
Learning OutcomesCheat Sheet
Paper art open Bible pages and icons on dark blue background for free Isaiah 1-4 quiz testing verse and prophecy knowledge

This Isaiah 1-4 quiz helps you review key verses, themes, and early prophecies from these chapters. Answer quick questions to check what you remember and spot gaps before study or class. When you finish, keep practicing with the Major Prophets quiz or try more Old Testament quizzes .

In Isaiah 1, whom does the prophet call to hear the LORD's accusation at the very start of the book?
Mountains of Israel
Priests and Levites
Kings of the nations
Heaven and earth
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Isaiah 1 contrasts Israel's rebellion with animals recognizing their owner. Which two animals are named?
Sheep and goat
Ox and donkey
Camel and horse
Lion and lamb
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Isaiah 1 describes the nation as injured from head to toe with wounds not bound up.
True
False
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According to Isaiah 1, without the LORD leaving a few survivors, Judah would have been like Sodom and Gomorrah.
False
True
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The call in Isaiah 1 to "wash yourselves" promises that sins like scarlet can become white as snow.
True
False
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Complete the conditional contrast in Isaiah 1: If willing and obedient, they will eat the good of the land; if they refuse and rebel, they will be
Driven into exile beyond Cush
Scattered among the Philistines
Struck with famine seven years
Devoured by the sword
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Isaiah 2 opens with a vision concerning which people and city?
Tyre and Sidon
Ephraim and Samaria
Judah and Jerusalem
Moab and Dibon
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In Isaiah 1, the "daughter of Zion" is left like which of the following?
A flock without a shepherd
A cistern without water
A booth in a vineyard
A tower on a wall
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In Isaiah 1, what does the LORD call the rulers of Jerusalem when rebuking their empty sacrifices?
Rulers of Sodom
Fools of Zion
Watchmen of Ephraim
Princes of Babel
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Which religious observances does Isaiah 1 specifically say the LORD hates when hands are full of blood?
Day of Atonement fast
New moons and Sabbaths
Year of Jubilee
Pilgrimage to Bethel
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In Isaiah 1, the faithful city had become a harlot; which two corruptions are paired with this image?
Leaky roof and crumbling walls
Broken cisterns and defiled altars
Silver turned to dross and wine mixed with water
Stolen weights and corrupt ephah
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Isaiah 1 promises restoration: judges as at the first will be restored to Jerusalem.
True
False
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Isaiah 2 accuses the people of being full of horses and chariots and also full of idols of silver and gold.
True
False
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According to Isaiah 1, the strong will be as tow (tinder) and the maker of it as a spark, so that both will
Burn together with none to quench
Be scattered to the four winds
Sink like a stone in deep waters
Be blown away like chaff
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Which foreign influence does Isaiah 2 specifically mention as a sign of Judah's unfaithfulness?
Baal of the Sidonians
Calves of Egypt
High places of the Hittites
Soothsayers like the Philistines
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In Isaiah 2, the day of the LORD targets human pride, symbolized by which natural heights?
Palms of Elim and deep valleys
Vineyards of Engedi and tall city gates
Cedars of Lebanon and lofty mountains
Oaks of Mamre and high watchtowers
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Isaiah 2 says people will cast their idols to moles and bats when the LORD rises to shake the earth.
False
True
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Which list best reflects leaders removed in Isaiah 3?
Farmer, vintner, potter, weaver, mason
Mighty man, judge, prophet, elder, captain of fifty
Priest, Levite, singer, gatekeeper, treasurer
King, queen, chamberlain, scribe, cupbearer
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In Isaiah 3, a man is asked to rule because he has clothing, but he refuses due to lacking bread and clothing in his house.
False
True
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According to the ESV wording of Isaiah 3:3, what specific expert is named among those removed when the LORD takes away support?
Skillful enchanter
Tentmaker
Shipwright
Master goldsmith
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Study Outcomes

  1. Analyze Prophetic Themes -

    Identify and differentiate the major themes of judgment, purification, and hope presented in Isaiah chapters 1 through 4.

  2. Interpret Symbolic Imagery -

    Explain the significance of sacrificial symbols and other vivid images to grasp their role in the prophetic message.

  3. Recall Key Verses -

    Memorize and accurately quote pivotal scripture passages that highlight God's covenant and Israel's response.

  4. Evaluate God's Sovereignty -

    Assess how the prophet Isaiah portrays God's authority and holiness in relation to Israel's moral state.

  5. Connect Historical Context -

    Relate events and societal conditions of 8th-century Judah to the prophecies delivered in Isaiah 1-4.

  6. Apply Prophetic Insights -

    Use the lessons from Isaiah 1-4 to reflect on themes of repentance and hope in contemporary faith practice.

Cheat Sheet

  1. Historical Context and Kings -

    Understanding the reigns of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah grounds Isaiah 1 - 4 in their real-world setting, a key tip for your Old Testament quiz. Use the mnemonic "4-Kings, 4-Chapters" to tie each monarch to the opening chapters of Isaiah for your Isaiah quiz prep.

  2. Covenant Lawsuit and Call to Repentance -

    Isaiah 1 presents a "heavenly courtroom" where God accuses Israel of covenant breaches, using vivid legal language that often appears in Bible commentaries like the ESV Study Bible. Remember the phrase "Hear, plead, repent" to ace questions in your Isaiah 1-4 quiz on prophetic indictments.

  3. Iconic Prophecies and Memory Verses -

    Key verses like 1:18 ("Though your sins be like scarlet…") and 2:4 ("They shall beat their swords into plowshares…") anchor the Isaiah verses quiz; recall "Scarlet to Snow" and "Swords to Plowshares" for quick recall. These memory phrases capture themes of forgiveness and peace that often appear in Bible chapter quizzes.

  4. Symbolism of Judgment in Chapter 3 -

    Isaiah 3 uses images of stripped adornments and dysfunctional leadership to illustrate societal collapse, a concept emphasized in Oxford Biblical Studies. Link "Adornment Lost" to understand how external pride conceals internal decay for better performance on your Isaiah quiz.

  5. Messianic Hope and the "Branch" Prophecy -

    Chapter 4's promise of a "Branch of the Lord" is a cornerstone of messianic expectation, frequently highlighted in academic journals on biblical prophecy. Recall the acronym "BLOOM" (Branch, Light, Oasis, Oil, Mercy) to solidify this theme for any Old Testament quiz.

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