Psalm 97:5
3 Fire goes before him; on every side it burns up his enemies. 4 His lightning bolts light up the world; the earth sees and trembles. 5 The mountains melt like wax before the Lord, before the Lord of the whole earth. 6 The sky declares his justice, and all the nations see his splendor. 7 All who worship idols are ashamed, those who boast about worthless idols. All the gods bow down before him.
Micah 1:4
2 Listen, all you nations! Pay attention, all inhabitants of earth! The Sovereign Lord will act as a witness against you; the Lord will accuse you from his majestic palace. 3 Look, the Lord is coming out of his dwelling place! He will descend and march on the earth’s mountaintops! 4 The mountains will crumble beneath him, and the valleys will split apart like wax before a fire, like water dumped down a steep slope. 5 All this is because of Jacob’s rebellion and the sins of the nation of Israel. And just what is Jacob’s rebellion? Isn’t it Samaria’s doings? And what is Judah’s sin? Isn’t it Jerusalem’s doings? 6 “I will turn Samaria into a heap of ruins in an open field, into a place for planting vineyards. I will dump the rubble of her walls down into the valley and lay bare her foundations.
Notes and References
"... The allusion in [1 Enoch] chapter 52 to the mountains of metal in the west that serve the authority of God’s messiah (verse 4) and will melt like wax before the Chosen One (verse 6) seems to have been influenced by the tradition of the seven mountains of precious stones in the northwest (18:6–9a; 24:1–3; 25:1–3), the middle one of which is the throne on which God will sit when he comes to visit the earth. However, this tradition has been transformed by its association with the tradition, familiar from theophanic passages, of the melting of the mountains at the coming of God (Micah 1:4; Psalm 97:5; compare Nahum 1:5; Judges 5:4). It has further been transformed by its combination with the theme of the metals, which are no doubt to be seen, as in Daniel 2:31–45, as representative of a succession of world empires. Vverse 7–9, which are introduced by “And it will come to pass in those days” and draw in verse 7 on Zephaniah 1:18, offer additional comment on the metals and may be secondary ..."
Knibb, Michael A. Essays on the Book of Enoch and Other Early Jewish Texts and Traditions (p. 133) Brill, 2009