Daniel 9:12
And he hath confirmed his words, which he spake against us, and against our judges that judged us, by bringing upon us a great evil: for under the whole heaven hath not been done as hath been done upon Jerusalem.
Cross-reference
Daniel 12:1 uses similar language—'such as never has been'—to describe a future tribulation, echoing the unparalleled disaster mentioned here.
Mark 13:19 parallels Daniel's wording—'such tribulation as has not been from the beginning'—reinforcing the theme of unparalleled distress.
Matthew 24:21 uses the same 'such as has not been from the beginning' language for future tribulation, echoing Daniel's unprecedented calamity.
Joel 2:2 describes a day with 'their like has never been before, nor will be again,' closely paralleling Daniel's claim of unmatched disaster.
Ezekiel 5:9 uses almost identical wording—'I will do with you what I have never yet done'—directly mirroring Daniel's description of unprecedented calamity.
In Lamentations 4:6, the same theme of unparalleled judgment appears—Jerusalem's punishment exceeds even Sodom's, echoing the 'no like done' language.
Lamentations 2:17 explicitly says God fulfilled his word by throwing down Jerusalem, exactly matching the confirmation of judgment in Daniel 9:12.
In Lamentations 1:12, the unparalleled sorrow of Jerusalem's destruction is lamented — the same disaster described here.
In 1 Kings 9:8, this warning of the temple becoming rubble is the very word Daniel says is fulfilled.
Zechariah 1:6 explicitly states that God's words overtook the fathers—the same fulfillment of judgment described in Daniel 9:12.
In Ezekiel 12:25, God promises his words will be performed—directly aligning with Daniel's confession that God fulfilled his words.
In Ezekiel 6:10, God says he will not threaten in vain—his disaster comes, exactly what Daniel 9:12 says was fulfilled.
In Lamentations 4:11, the Lord pours out his wrath on Jerusalem, directly describing the same calamity Daniel refers to.
In Jeremiah 39:16, God promises disaster on Jerusalem—exactly the fulfilled word Daniel 9:12 confesses.
In Jeremiah 32:23, the disaster is tied to disobedience—the very reason Daniel gives in prayer.
In Jeremiah 30:7, the unmatched time of trouble parallels Daniel's claim that nothing like this ever happened.
In Jeremiah 25:18, making Jerusalem a ruin and horror is exactly the disaster Daniel says came.
In Isaiah 40:2, the punishment is declared complete—contrasting with Daniel's confession of ongoing disaster.
In 2 Chronicles 7:22, the reason for disaster—forsaking God—is the same cause Daniel acknowledges.
In 2 Kings 21:12, the promised disaster that makes ears tingle is fulfilled in Daniel's confession.
Deuteronomy 28:59 promises 'extraordinary afflictions' for disobedience—directly matching the unprecedented disasters Daniel says have come.
In Jeremiah 44:23, the people's sins directly brought the calamity, providing the cause for the event Daniel references.
In Jeremiah 44:22, the Lord could no longer bear their evil, so the land became desolate—matching the judgment Daniel acknowledges.
In Jeremiah 44:6, God's anger is poured out on cities, making them desolate—mirroring the great calamity Daniel describes.
In Jeremiah 40:3, the Babylonian captain identifies sin as the cause of the calamity, echoing the reason behind Daniel's confession.
Luke 21:22 calls the days 'of vengeance, to fulfill all that is written,' linking to Daniel's description of God confirming his words of judgment.
Zechariah 1:2 recalls God's anger against the fathers, reinforcing that the disaster in Daniel 9:12 is a result of divine wrath.
Zechariah 7:12 explains that hard hearts led to God's great anger, providing the cause behind the disaster in Daniel 9:12.