Isaiah 1:24
Therefore saith the Lord, the Lord of hosts, the mighty One of Israel, Ah, I will ease me of mine adversaries, and avenge me of mine enemies:
Cross-reference
In Isaiah 43:24, God says Israel has wearied Him with iniquities—revealing the same cause for the vengeance declared here.
In Isaiah 59:18, God repays wrath to His adversaries—an almost identical declaration of vengeance, reinforcing the same divine response.
In Isaiah 3:1, God removes supply and support from Jerusalem—a specific judgment that follows the same divine justice declared here.
Revelation 18:8 describes God's mighty judgment on Babylon, paralleling the divine vengeance on foes here.
Deuteronomy 32:43 explicitly declares God's vengeance on his enemies, directly echoing the vengeance theme here.
Ezekiel 21:17 depicts God striking hands as his wrath subsides — echoing the divine vengeance theme here.
Ezekiel 5:13 describes God spending his wrath until avenged — directly parallel to the venting of wrath here.
Jeremiah 50:34 depicts God as a strong Redeemer who avenges his people, echoing the vengeance declared here.
Jeremiah 9:9 repeats the identical 'avenge myself' rhetoric, reinforcing God's settled resolve to judge rebellion.
In 1 Thessalonians 4:6, the Lord is called 'the avenger' — directly echoing the avenging action described here.
Zephaniah 1:18 vividly depicts the day of the Lord's wrath and consumption, strongly echoing the same fiery vengeance declared here.
Jeremiah 5:9 uses the same rhetorical 'avenge myself' phrase, showing God's consistent pattern of punishing covenant unfaithfulness.
In Deuteronomy 32:41, God declares He will sharpen His sword and render vengeance on His adversaries—a very close parallel to God's vengeance here.
Proverbs 1:26 has wisdom laughing at those who rejected her — a similar divine response of judgment as venting wrath.
In Numbers 31:2, God commands Moses to take vengeance on Midianites—a historical instance of God's judgment that parallels His own vengeance here.
Ezekiel 16:42 speaks of God's wrath subsiding after judgment — a complementary aspect to the venting of wrath.
In Hebrews 10:13, Christ waits for enemies to be made a footstool—echoing God's vengeance here as part of the same eschatological victory.
Deuteronomy 28:63 shows God taking pleasure in destroying the disobedient — a similar divine delight in judgment.