Isaiah 2:10
Enter into the rock, and hide thee in the dust, for fear of the Lord, and for the glory of his majesty.
Cross-reference
Isaiah 2:19-21 expands on the same scene of hiding in caves from the terror of the LORD — a direct parallel within the chapter.
Isaiah 2:21 repeats the same phrase about hiding in rocks for fear of God's majesty — a parallel within the same prophecy.
Isaiah 10:3 asks what you will do in the day of punishment — the same terror and futility of hiding from God's judgment.
In Isaiah 6:3-5, the prophet trembles at God's glory — the same majesty that drives people to hide in Isaiah 2:10.
In Job 37:22-24, God's terrible majesty makes men fear Him — directly paralleling the reason for hiding in Isaiah 2:10.
Revelation 15:4 explicitly asks 'Who shall not fear thee, O Lord?' — a direct echo of the fear response in Isaiah 2:10.
In Revelation 6:16, they call on rocks to hide them from God's face — the same plea for cover as Isaiah 2:10.
In Revelation 6:15, all ranks hide in rocks from the Lamb's wrath — directly paralleling the terror and hiding in Isaiah 2:10.
In Luke 23:30, Jesus predicts cries for mountains to fall — echoing the same hiding from wrath as Isaiah 2:10.
In Hosea 10:8, people beg mountains to cover them from judgment — mirroring the hiding from God's majesty in Isaiah 2:10.
Jeremiah 10:10 depicts God's wrath causing the earth to tremble — directly parallel to the terror that drives hiding from His majesty in Isaiah.
In Job 31:23, Job fears God's destruction and majesty — the same terror that motivates hiding in Isaiah 2:10.
Micah 1:3 describes the LORD coming down in judgment—the event causing the terror that makes hiding necessary in Isaiah 2:10.
In Daniel 10:7, companions hide from a divine vision—mirroring the command to hide from the LORD's terror in Isaiah 2:10.
2 Thessalonians 1:9 describes punishment away from the Lord's presence and glory—echoing Isaiah 2:10's hiding from His terror and majesty.
Revelation 21:23 shows God's glory as the city's light—contrasting with Isaiah 2:10 where His glory terrifies and causes hiding.
Luke 12:5 commands fear of God who has power over eternal judgment — a NT parallel to the fear of the Lord's majestic judgment.
Jeremiah 10:7 calls God the King of nations who alone is to be feared — echoing the same reverence for God's majesty that drives hiding in fear.