2 Kings 24:13
And he carried out thence all the treasures of the house of the Lord, and the treasures of the king’s house, and cut in pieces all the vessels of gold which Solomon king of Israel had made in the temple of the Lord, as the Lord had said.
Cross-reference
2 Kings 20:17 records Isaiah's prophecy that all Hezekiah's treasures would be carried to Babylon—precisely fulfilled here.
2 Kings 25:13-15 details the further looting of the temple's bronze vessels and utensils, continuing the plunder described here.
In 2 Kings 14:14, Jehoash looted temple treasures after Amaziah's defeat — another earlier instance of temple plunder before Babylon.
1 Kings 7:48-50 lists the golden vessels Solomon made for the temple — the same ones that were cut in pieces here.
2 Chronicles 4:7-22 describes the same golden vessels Solomon made — later plundered and destroyed here.
Daniel 5:3 continues: the vessels taken here are brought for Belshazzar's feast, showing their ongoing misuse.
Daniel 5:2 shows Belshazzar using these same temple vessels for his feast — a later desecration of what was plundered here.
Ezra 1:7-11 records Cyrus returning the very same temple vessels that Nebuchadnezzar took here — a restoration of what was plundered.
Isaiah 39:6 is the same prophecy to Hezekiah, declaring nothing left—fulfilled when Nebuchadnezzar looted the temple and palace.
Jeremiah 28:3 records Hananiah's false claim that the vessels would return in two years — directly contradicted by their actual plundering here.
Jeremiah 20:5 prophesied that all treasures of Judah would be given to enemies—exactly what happened to the temple and royal treasures.
Jeremiah 27:16-21 prophesied that these temple vessels would be taken to Babylon — here that prophecy is fulfilled.
In 1 Kings 14:26, Shishak earlier plundered temple treasures and gold shields — a prior despoliation that foreshadows this larger Babylonian plunder.
In Daniel 1:1, the same Babylonian siege is dated to Jehoiakim's third year, providing chronological context for the temple plunder.
Ezekiel 7:22 prophesies robbers profaning the temple — fulfilled when Nebuchadnezzar's forces plundered its treasures here.
Jeremiah 27:22 prophesies these temple vessels will be carried to Babylon and later restored — partially fulfilled here.
Jeremiah 17:3 prophesies Judah's treasures will be given as spoil — fulfilled when Nebuchadnezzar plundered the temple here.
Ezra 6:5 commands the return of these same gold vessels taken by Nebuchadnezzar, completing the cycle from plunder to restoration.
2 Chronicles 36:7 notes Nebuchadnezzar carried temple vessels to Babylon, a parallel account of this same plundering.
2 Chronicles 4:19 lists the golden vessels Solomon made for the temple — the very items later cut up by Nebuchadnezzar here.
Psalm 79:1 laments the nations defiling the temple and ruining Jerusalem — the same event that included this plundering.
In Joel 3:5, God accuses nations of taking His silver and gold — echoing the stripping of temple treasures described here.