2 Chronicles 15:6
And nation was destroyed of nation, and city of city: for God did vex them with all adversity.
Cross-reference
Verse 15 describes peace and rest after seeking God — a direct contrast to the turmoil described here, showing the shift from judgment to blessing.
2 Chronicles 36:17 recounts the Babylonian conquest — a specific fulfillment of the 'nation against nation' judgment described here, with God delivering them to enemies.
2 Chronicles 12:15 notes continual wars between Rehoboam and Jeroboam, exemplifying the nation-against-nation conflict described here.
2 Chronicles 33:11 shows God bringing adversity through Assyrian captivity, a concrete example of the 'every adversity' He troubled them with here.
Judges 2:14 describes the same pattern: God sells Israel into enemy hands — exactly the kind of trouble referred to here, with 'nation against nation'.
Psalm 106:41 echoes this: God gave Israel into the hand of the nations, the very 'nation against nation' trouble described here.
Isaiah 10:6 shows God sending Assyria as his judgment agent — the same divine use of foreign nations to trouble people as in this verse.
Amos 3:6 declares that disaster comes from the LORD — directly supporting the statement here that 'God troubled them with all adversity.'
Mark 13:8 uses the same phrase 'nation will rise against nation', directly paralleling the description here of nation against nation.
Luke 21:10 repeats 'nation will rise against nation' almost word-for-word, directly echoing this verse's phrasing of nation against nation.
Jeremiah 25:32 echoes the same 'nation to nation' destruction as a coming judgment, reinforcing the pattern of divine judgment through international conflict.
Matthew 24:7 repeats the 'nation against nation' language as an end-times sign, linking historical judgment to eschatological prophecy.
Isaiah 42:24 attributes national destruction to God's judgment for disobedience, reinforcing that God uses conflict to punish sin.