Isaiah 10:25
For yet a very little while, and the indignation shall cease, and mine anger in their destruction.
Cross-reference
Isaiah 10:33 describes God cutting down the proud Assyrian boughs, fulfilling the destruction announced here.
Isaiah 10:34 continues the imagery of God felling the forest of Assyria with an axe, completing the judgment scene.
Isaiah 10:12 explains that after God's work on Zion, He will punish Assyria — the immediate context for the anger ceasing.
Isaiah 12:1 records the thanksgiving song when God's anger turns away, directly responding to the promise here.
Isaiah 14:24 affirms God's sworn purpose to break Assyria, reinforcing the certainty of the destruction promised here.
Isaiah 14:25 specifically describes breaking the Assyrian in God's land, fulfilling the destruction foretold in this verse.
Isaiah 30:30-33 describes the Lord's fiery judgment on Assyria, including Tophet for its king, directly parallel to the destruction here.
Isaiah 31:4-9 portrays the Lord defending Zion and the Assyrian falling, fulfilling the promise that God's anger will cease with Assyria's destruction.
Isaiah 37:36-38 reports the angel killing Assyrian soldiers and Sennacherib's death, the historical fulfillment of the destruction predicted here.
2 Kings 19:35 records the same historical event as Isaiah 37:36—the angel striking the Assyrian camp. Fulfills the destruction promised here.
2 Kings 19:32 describes God's protection of Jerusalem from Assyria, directly fulfilling the promised end of indignation in Isaiah 10:25.
2 Chronicles 32:22 recounts the same deliverance from Sennacherib, confirming the cessation of God's anger against Judah.
Psalm 85:4 directly prays for God's anger to cease, matching the promise in Isaiah 10:25 that indignation will cease.
In Haggai 2:6, the same phrase 'yet a little while' announces a cosmic shaking — here it signals the imminent end of God's anger.
Psalm 9:6 speaks of the enemy's destruction as perpetual, echoing the end of Assyria implied in Isaiah 10:25.
In Amos 7:5, the prophet intercedes for God to cease his judgment — a parallel plea that God's indignation will soon end here.