2 Chronicles 34:25

Because they have forsaken me, and have burned incense unto other gods, that they might provoke me to anger with all the works of their hands; therefore my wrath shall be poured out upon this place, and shall not be quenched.

Cross-references

2 Chronicles 12:2 describes Shishak's attack as punishment for unfaithfulness, mirroring the same cause as the wrath proclaimed here.

2 Chronicles 15:2 states the covenant principle: forsaking God leads to being forsaken, exactly what Huldah's prophecy declares.

2 Chronicles 33:3–9 Historical context

2 Chronicles 33:3-9 details Manasseh's specific idolatries—burning incense, altars—which are the very sins provoking God's anger here.

2 Chronicles 29:8 describes God's anger falling on Judah for their unfaithfulness — the same pattern as the judgment prophesied here.

2 Chronicles 12:7 shows God withholding wrath when people humble themselves — a contrast to the unquenched anger here.

2 Kings 22:17 is the parallel account with almost identical wording — God's wrath kindled and not quenched for forsaking him.

2 Kings 24:3 Prophetic fulfillment

2 Kings 24:3 explicitly links Judah's exile to Manasseh's sins, fulfilling the judgment threatened in Huldah's prophecy.

2 Kings 24:4 Historical context

2 Kings 24:4 adds innocent bloodshed to Manasseh's sins, further specifying the reasons for the unquenchable anger.

Mark 9:43-48 applies 'the fire is not quenched' to hell — using the same OT phrase for eternal punishment.

Isaiah 2:8 Parallel

Isaiah 2:8 condemns worshiping 'the work of their hands,' directly echoing the phrase used here for idolatry.

Ezekiel 20:48 declares the fire the Lord kindled shall not be quenched — a direct verbal echo of the judgment on Jerusalem.

In Jeremiah 7:20, God's wrath is poured out and not quenched — the same judgment language against Jerusalem for idolatry.

Jeremiah 15:1–4 Historical context

Jeremiah 15:1-4 explicitly names Manasseh's sins as the cause of irreversible judgment, identical to the grounds here.

Lamentations 4:11 says God poured out his hot anger and kindled a consuming fire — directly echoing the poured-out, unquenchable wrath.

Jeremiah 1:16 uses nearly identical language — God judges his people for forsaking him and worshiping idols.

Jeremiah 42:18 refers to the same pouring out of God's wrath on Jerusalem that Huldah prophesied.

Jeremiah 22:9 gives the same reason for judgment — forsaking God's covenant and serving other gods.

2 Kings 22:16 records the same prophecy from Huldah — God's anger on Judah for forsaking him.

Ezra 5:12 Prophetic fulfillment

Ezra 5:12 recounts the fulfillment — God gave Judah into Babylonian hands because they angered him, just as Huldah prophesied.

Revelation 9:20 uses 'works of their hands' for unrepentant idol worship, echoing the same phrase and cause of judgment here.

Micah 6:16 Parallel

Micah 6:16 condemns following statutes of Omri and works of Ahab, provoking divine judgment—parallel to the idolatry and wrath in this verse.

Revelation 14:10 Related theme

Revelation 14:10 uses the cup of God's wrath poured full strength — an eschatological extension of the same imagery of divine retribution.