Isaiah 14:22

For I will rise up against them, saith the Lord of hosts, and cut off from Babylon the name, and remnant, and son, and nephew, saith the Lord.

Cross-reference

Isaiah 13:5 Historical context

Isaiah 13:5 describes the Lord's weapons coming to destroy the whole land — part of the same Babylon oracle, providing the broader judgment context.

Isaiah 21:9 Prophetic fulfillment

Isaiah 21:9 declares Babylon is fallen — directly confirming the complete destruction and removal of name and remnant prophesied here.

Isaiah 43:14 Related theme

In Isaiah 43:14, the same theme of God bringing down Babylon and its fugitives echoes the cutting off of name and remnant here.

In Isaiah 47:9-14, the detailed judgment on Babylon — sudden destruction and loss of sorceries — parallels the total eradication of name and remnant here.

Isaiah 48:19 promises Israel's name and descendants will never be cut off—a direct contrast to Babylon's fate here.

Jeremiah 51:62-64 is another prophecy of Babylon's total destruction, complementing this judgment with a symbolic action.

In Jeremiah 51:57, the perpetual sleep of Babylon's leaders and warriors fulfills the total annihilation of posterity declared here.

In Jeremiah 51:56, the destroyer who repays Babylon and breaks its warriors echoes the Lord cutting off name and remnant from the city here.

In Jeremiah 51:4, the slain in the streets of Chaldea depict the complete obliteration that leaves no remnant, echoing the judgment here.

In Jeremiah 51:3, the command to spare no young men and devote all to destruction parallels the cutting off of every descendant and survivor from Babylon.

In Jeremiah 50:29-35, the comprehensive judgment against Babylon — archers, sword, no escape — reinforces the total eradication of name and remnant declared here.

In Jeremiah 50:27, the pronouncement that Babylon's day of punishment has come mirrors the destruction of its descendants and posterity here.

In Jeremiah 50:26, the command to 'devote her to destruction' and 'let nothing be left' directly echoes the complete cutting off of Babylon's name and remnant here.

Jeremiah 29:32 cuts off Shemaiah's descendants—a parallel judgment removing posterity, just as Babylon's offspring are cut off.

Psalm 9:6 Parallel

Psalm 9:6 says the enemy's memory perishes — matching the cutting off of Babylon's name and remnant in this judgment.

Job 18:19 Parallel

Job 18:19 describes the wicked having no offspring or survivor — almost identical to Babylon's fate of no remnant or posterity.

Jeremiah 50:12 portrays Babylon's shame and desolation—echoing the cutting off of her name and posterity.

Jeremiah 50:3 Prophetic fulfillment

Jeremiah 50:3 describes Babylon's desolation by a northern nation—fulfilling the judgment of cutting off remnant and name.

1 Kings 14:10 uses identical language of cutting off every male — showing this judgment formula applied to other wicked dynasties.

Job 18:16 Parallel

In Job 18:19, the wicked having no offspring or survivor parallels the cutting off of Babylon's descendants — but applied to individuals, not nations.

Proverbs 10:7 parallels this by stating the name of the wicked will rot — both emphasize the obliteration of the wicked's legacy.

2 Kings 10:11 recounts Jehu killing all of Ahab's house — a parallel to the total eradication of Babylon's remnant here.