Isaiah 17:14
And behold at eveningtide trouble; and before the morning he is not. This is the portion of them that spoil us, and the lot of them that rob us.
Cross-reference
Isaiah 33:1 pronounces woe on the destroyer who will be destroyed, the same retributive justice as the plunderers' portion in Isaiah 17:14.
Isaiah 37:7 foretells God making Sennacherib fall — directly fulfilling the sudden overnight defeat of the Assyrian threat hinted at here.
Isaiah 37:33 specifies that the Assyrian king will not enter Jerusalem — concrete outworking of the promise that plunderers vanish before morning.
Isaiah 27:7 asks if the enemy's punishment matches their own violence — reinforcing the theme of divine retribution against oppressors.
In 2 Kings 19:35, the angel strikes the Assyrian army overnight—the exact fulfillment of 'before morning they are no more'.
Job 20:29 calls the wicked's fate their 'portion from God', exactly the same language Isaiah uses for the plunderers' lot.
Proverbs 22:23 promises God will rob the robbers, directly paralleling the plunderers receiving destruction in Isaiah 17:14.
Psalm 37:36 depicts the wicked suddenly vanishing, mirroring the fate of Isaiah's plunderers who are gone by morning.
Jeremiah 2:3 says disaster comes upon those who devour Israel, matching Isaiah's declaration that plunderers are destroyed.