2 Kings 24:2
And the Lord sent against him bands of the Chaldees, and bands of the Syrians, and bands of the Moabites, and bands of the children of Ammon, and sent them against Judah to destroy it, according to the word of the Lord, which he spake by his servants the prophets.
Cross-reference
In 2 Kings 20:17, Isaiah prophesies all Hezekiah's treasures will go to Babylon — the invasion fulfills that warning.
In 2 Kings 21:12-14, God threatens to wipe Jerusalem and abandon the remnant — the raids execute that judgment.
In 2 Kings 23:27, God declares He will remove Judah from His sight — the invasion here is that removal.
2 Kings 21:14 records God's promise to forsake Judah and deliver them to enemies—the invasion in 24:2 is its fulfillment.
2 Kings 23:26 explains God's fierce wrath remained despite Josiah's reforms—24:2 shows that wrath executed.
Deuteronomy 28:50 describes the ruthless invader; this verse shows the fulfillment of that curse.
Micah 3:12 prophesies Zion plowed and Jerusalem heaps—the destruction described in 2 Kings 24:2.
In Jeremiah 35:11, the Rechabites flee to Jerusalem because of the same Babylonian and Aramean armies, confirming the historical invasion.
Jeremiah 32:28 is the prophetic word of Jerusalem's fall to the Chaldeans, which the invasion in 2 Kings 24:2 fulfills.
In Jeremiah 26:6, God warns He will make the temple like Shiloh and Jerusalem a curse — the invasion brings that curse.
In Jeremiah 25:9, God says He will bring Nebuchadnezzar and all nations against Jerusalem — the raiders fulfill that.
In Isaiah 6:12, God says He will remove people far away — the exile and raids here are that removal.
Deuteronomy 28:49 prophesied a distant nation invading; here that curse is fulfilled as God sends foreign bands.
Ezra 5:12 later attributes the exile to God's wrath, giving them into Nebuchadnezzar's hand—identical to the judgment in 24:2.
2 Chronicles 36:17 describes the king of Chaldees slaying and destroying—the same event as the enemy bands in 24:2.
2 Chronicles 36:6 recounts Nebuchadnezzar's attack and binding Jehoiachin—parallel account of the same invasion.
Ezekiel 23:23 names the very nations—Babylonians, Chaldeans, Assyrians—that God sends against Jerusalem, the same coalition of raiders described here.
Daniel 1:1 records Nebuchadnezzar's siege of Jerusalem, the specific Babylonian action that fulfills the raiders sent by God in this verse.
Habakkuk 1:6 reveals God raising up the Babylonians as executioners of judgment, exactly what is described here as the LORD sending raiders.
Ezekiel 19:8 uses hunters from nations trapping a lion to metaphorically describe the attack on Judah's prince during this very invasion.
Jeremiah 34:22 predicts Babylon's return to burn Jerusalem, a later stage of the judgment that begins with these invading bands.
Lamentations 1:1 laments Jerusalem's desolation, the ultimate outcome of the destruction that begins with the enemy bands sent in this verse.