Isaiah 13:6
Howl ye; for the day of the Lord is at hand; it shall come as a destruction from the Almighty.
Cross-reference
Isaiah 13:9 expands on the day of the LORD's coming with wrath, directly continuing the same prophecy.
Isaiah 14:31 also begins with 'Wail' and pronounces judgment on Philistia, mirroring the call to wail at the day of the LORD.
Isaiah 23:1 likewise commands 'Wail' over Tyre's destruction, echoing the same judgment language.
Isaiah 34:8 calls it the LORD's day of vengeance, reinforcing the theme of divine judgment.
Isaiah 2:12 also proclaims the day of the LORD against the proud—directly parallel to the near destruction here.
Isaiah 65:14 contrasts the wicked wailing with servants' joy, but both involve wailing under divine judgment.
In Joel 1:15, the exact same phrase 'the day of the LORD is near, as destruction from the Almighty' — a parallel proclamation of impending doom.
Revelation 18:10 depicts lament over Babylon's fall, echoing the 'Wail' for the day of the LORD's judgment.
Joel 2:11 proclaims the day of the LORD is great and awesome, amplifying the warning.
Joel 2:31 describes cosmic signs before the day of the LORD, adding dramatic detail to its nearness.
In Amos 5:18, a similar warning: the day of the LORD brings darkness, not light — reinforcing the terror Isaiah calls to wail over.
In Zephaniah 1:7, the same urgency — the day of the LORD is at hand — commanding silence before God's judgment sacrifice.
Zephaniah 1:14 repeats that the great day of the LORD is near, directly reinforcing Isaiah's message.
In Zephaniah 2:2, the day of the LORD's anger is imminent, echoing the near destruction Isaiah announces.
In Zephaniah 2:3, the same day of anger prompts a call to seek humility and righteousness for possible hiding.
In 1 Thessalonians 5:2, Paul uses the same 'day of the Lord' imagery — coming unexpectedly as a thief — echoing Isaiah's sudden destruction.
In 1 Thessalonians 5:3, sudden destruction like labor pains parallels the 'destruction from the Almighty' in Isaiah — emphasizing inescapability.
James 5:1 warns the rich to weep for coming miseries, paralleling the call to wail over the day of the LORD's judgment.
Ezekiel 30:3 declares the day of the LORD near, using identical language for judgment on nations.
Ezekiel 30:2 commands 'Wail, Alas for the day!' directly echoing the day of the LORD theme.
Ezekiel 21:12 tells the son of man to cry out and wail because judgment is against Israel—same call to lament.
Jeremiah 25:34 calls shepherds to wail because their day of slaughter has come—direct parallel to the day of the LORD's destruction.
Jeremiah 51:8 says 'wail for her' over Babylon's fall, matching the call to wail at the day of the LORD.
Jeremiah 49:3 commands wailing over Heshbon and Rabbah, a judgment oracle like Isaiah's.
Jeremiah 4:8 calls for wailing because of the LORD's fierce anger—matching the urgent wail for the day of the LORD.
Revelation 6:17 directly quotes the 'great day of their wrath' and asks 'who can stand?' — echoing Isaiah's 'day of the LORD' as final eschatological judgment.
Jeremiah 30:6 depicts men in labor-like pain—the same anguished response to the day of the LORD.
Jeremiah 46:10 explicitly calls it 'the day of the Lord Almighty' for vengeance—identical theme to the destruction from the Almighty.
Jeremiah 50:43 echoes the same terror: Babylon's king hears the report, hands grow feeble, anguish like childbirth — mirroring the 'day of the LORD' judgment.
Jeremiah 51:54 cries out the same destruction from Babylon, directly paralleling the 'destruction from the Almighty' in Isaiah's prophecy.
In Malachi 4:5, the 'great and terrible day of the LORD' is preceded by Elijah — linking to the same day Isaiah calls near.
Joel 1:13 calls priests to lament and wail, mirroring the alarm over coming destruction in Isaiah's day of the LORD.
Zechariah 14:1 also announces a 'day of the LORD' coming, but for Jerusalem's deliverance and judgment — sharing the phrase but not the same historical event.
Ezekiel 13:5 rebukes false prophets for not preparing for the day of the LORD — the same concept Isaiah warns about, but applied to Israel's leaders.
Joel 1:11 echoes the call to wail over agricultural ruin, a sign of the day of the LORD's judgment.
Jeremiah 4:20 describes destruction following destruction—similar to the sudden devastation of the day of the LORD.