Isaiah 22:5
For it is a day of trouble, and of treading down, and of perplexity by the Lord God of hosts in the valley of vision, breaking down the walls, and of crying to the mountains.
Cross-reference
In Isaiah 10:6, Assyria is sent to tread down God's people, matching the trampling in this day of tumult.
In Isaiah 37:3, Hezekiah calls it a day of distress, directly echoing this day of tumult during the Assyrian siege.
In 2 Kings 19:3, the same phrase 'day of distress' appears, describing the same historical crisis as Isaiah 37:3.
2 Kings 25:10 records Babylonian armies breaking Jerusalem's walls — the literal fulfillment of Isaiah's 'breaking down the walls'.
In Jeremiah 30:7, a time of distress for Jacob parallels this day of tumult, both depicting divine judgment.
Revelation 6:17 declares the great day of wrath has come — the same 'day of trouble' Isaiah prophesied, now eschatologically.
In Ezekiel 7:7, the exact phrase 'the day of trouble' appears, describing the same imminent judgment.
In Zephaniah 1:15, the identical phrase 'a day of trouble' appears, directly echoing the judgment described here.
In Zephaniah 1:14, the great day of the Lord near, with bitter crying, resonates with the day of trouble and crying.
Lamentations 2:2 depicts God throwing down Judah's strongholds, matching the destruction in Isaiah's 'day of trouble'.
In Luke 21:25, 'perplexity' appears again in an eschatological setting of distress, paralleling the day of trouble.