Isaiah 10:18

And shall consume the glory of his forest, and of his fruitful field, both soul and body: and they shall be as when a standardbearer fainteth.

Cross-reference

Isaiah 10:33 continues the forest metaphor, with the Lord lopping boughs and hewing down the haughty—same judgment imagery against Assyria.

Isaiah 10:34 describes cutting down the forest thickets with iron, reinforcing the destruction of Assyria's 'glory' depicted in this verse.

Isaiah 9:18 Parallel

In Isaiah 9:18, the same fire consumes forest imagery depicts judgment on wickedness — both use God's fire devouring glory.

Isaiah 37:24 Historical context

Isaiah 37:24 records Sennacherib's boast of cutting down Lebanon's forest — the pride that leads to God's destruction of the forest in Isaiah 10:18.

Jeremiah 21:14 uses identical fire‐in‐forest judgment metaphor against Jerusalem — same divine punishment imagery.

Ezekiel 20:47 expands the fire‐consuming‐forest parable — every green and dry tree devoured, echoing Isaiah 10:18.

In 2 Kings 19:23, Assyria boasts of cutting down forests — the pride that God's fire consumes in Isaiah 10:18 as judgment.

Jeremiah 46:23 uses the same forest destruction metaphor for God's judgment on Egypt — a parallel judgment pattern against a proud nation.