Isaiah 13:11
And I will punish the world for their evil, and the wicked for their iniquity; and I will cause the arrogancy of the proud to cease, and will lay low the haughtiness of the terrible.
Cross-references
Isaiah 2:17 uses the same motif: God humbles human pride — a core theme echoed in Isaiah 13:11's judgment on the haughty.
Isaiah 5:15 similarly declares universal humbling of the arrogant — reinforcing the judgment theme in Isaiah 13:11.
Isaiah 14:12-16 describes the fall of Babylon's proud king — a specific example of the haughty being humbled in Isaiah 13:11.
Isaiah 14:21 orders sons killed for their fathers' guilt, continuing the theme of punishing Babylon's arrogance introduced here.
Isaiah 24:4-6 describes the earth mourning and a curse for transgression, expanding the global punishment for evil mentioned here.
Isaiah 2:11 declares the same truth: the arrogant will be humbled and the LORD exalted, directly mirroring the judgment on pride in 13:11.
Isaiah 23:9 reveals God's plan to bring down pride and humble the renowned, reinforcing the theme of divine judgment on arrogance.
Isaiah 25:11 depicts God bringing down pride, specifically of Moab, echoing the same divine action against arrogance.
Isaiah 26:5 states God humbles the lofty and levels the proud city, directly paralleling the humbling of the haughty.
Jeremiah 50:29-32 also pronounces judgment on Babylon's arrogance — a parallel prophecy to Isaiah 13:11's punishment of pride.
Daniel 5:23 condemns Belshazzar's pride and idolatry — the exact arrogance that Isaiah 13:11 says will be punished.
Revelation 18:2 echoes Isaiah's judgment on Babylon — the fall of the oppressive world system is declared.
Daniel 5:22 rebukes Belshazzar for not humbling himself — an example of the pride that Isaiah 13:11 says God will punish.