Isaiah 13:13
Therefore I will shake the heavens, and the earth shall remove out of her place, in the wrath of the Lord of hosts, and in the day of his fierce anger.
Cross-reference
In Matthew 24:29, Jesus describes the same cosmic signs — darkened sun, falling stars — fulfilling Isaiah's prophecy of the heavens being shaken.
In Revelation 20:11, earth and sky flee from God's presence — a final, cosmic dissolution like the trembling here.
In Revelation 6:14, the sky splitting and rolling up like a scroll continues the imagery of cosmic dissolution parallel to Isaiah 13:13.
In Revelation 6:13, stars falling like figs from a tree depicts the same heavenly turmoil Isaiah prophesied about the day of the Lord.
In 2 Peter 3:10, the day of the Lord brings heavens passing away and earth burned — directly echoes Isaiah's cosmic judgment.
In Hebrews 12:27, the removal of what is shaken contrasts with the unshakable kingdom, deepening Isaiah's warning into a call to endurance.
In Hebrews 12:26, the writer quotes Haggai to show that God's voice will once more shake the creation, echoing Isaiah's cataclysmic language.
In Haggai 2:22, overthrowing thrones and kingdoms mirrors the political collapse described in Isaiah's day of the Lord.
In Haggai 2:21, the repeated promise to shake heaven and earth reinforces the cosmic upheaval theme from Isaiah.
In Haggai 2:7, the shaking extends to all nations, paralleling Isaiah's universal judgment.
In Haggai 2:6, the same phrase 'shake the heavens and the earth' echoes Isaiah's judgment language, applying it to a future shaking.
In Nahum 1:4-6, the earth heaves and mountains quake before God's indignation — nearly identical imagery of creation shaking under wrath.
Jeremiah 51:29 repeats the same cosmic shaking imagery for Babylon's judgment: 'the earth trembles and writhes'.
In Matthew 24:35, Jesus says heaven and earth will pass away — a more absolute version of the cosmic shaking here.
Luke 21:25 echoes the cosmic disturbance in Isaiah 13:13, applying it to end-time signs of the Son of Man's coming.
In Job 9:6, God shakes the earth out of its place — same action, but Job describes God's general power, not a specific judgment.
In Jeremiah 4:24, mountains and hills tremble similarly — both depict cosmic upheaval under God's judgment.