Isaiah 24:13

When thus it shall be in the midst of the land among the people, there shall be as the shaking of an olive tree, and as the gleaning grapes when the vintage is done.

Cross-reference

Isaiah 1:9 Parallel

Isaiah 1:9 speaks of a very small remnant left by the Lord, similar to the remnant metaphor in Isaiah 24:13.

Isaiah 6:13 Parallel

Isaiah 6:13 uses a tree stump as a remnant image, paralleling the olive tree and gleanings metaphor in Isaiah 24:13.

Isaiah 10:20-22 explicitly mentions a remnant of Jacob returning, directly paralleling the remnant concept in Isaiah 24:13.

Isaiah 17:6 Parallel

Isaiah 17:6 uses identical imagery of olive tree shaking and gleaning grapes, closely matching Isaiah 24:13's metaphor.

Isaiah 27:12 also uses gleaning imagery—God will gather Israel one by one, directly echoing the remnant metaphor in Isaiah 24:13.

Romans 11:2-6 develops the remnant doctrine from Elijah, showing God's gracious preservation of a remnant.

Matthew 24:22 speaks of cutting short tribulation for the elect, a NT echo of the remnant preserved through judgment.

Micah 2:12 Parallel

Micah 2:12 pictures God gathering the remnant like sheep, fulfilling the gleaning's promise of a preserved people.

Ezekiel 14:22 explicitly describes a remnant spared from judgment, directly paralleling the gleaning survivors.

Ezekiel 11:16-20 promises God as a sanctuary and restoration to the remnant, expanding the gleaning into future hope.

Ezekiel 7:16 depicts survivors moaning on mountains after judgment, mirroring the gleaning's few left.

Obadiah 1:5 Parallel

Obadiah 1:5 uses the same gleaning metaphor—grape gatherers leave gleanings, just like the remnant in Isaiah 24:13.

Micah 7:1 Contrast

Micah 7:1 laments that after gleaning nothing remains—contrasting with Isaiah 24:13 where gleanings represent a remnant left.

Romans 9:27 Citation

Romans 9:27 cites Isaiah 10:22-23 about a remnant being saved, directly paralleling the gleaning/remnant imagery in Isaiah 24:13.

Leviticus 19:10 Historical context

Leviticus 19:10 commands leaving gleanings for the poor—the very practice Isaiah uses as a metaphor for a remnant after judgment.

Ezekiel 6:8-10 says God will leave some alive as a remnant among nations, echoing the remnant in Isaiah 24:13.

Jeremiah 44:28 says a remnant of Judah will return few in number, paralleling the remnant idea in Isaiah 24:13.

Jeremiah 4:27 states God will not make a full end—the same remnant hope as the gleanings in Isaiah 24:13.

Jeremiah 3:14 says God will take a remnant 'one from a city and two from a family'—parallel to the gleanings remnant in Isaiah 24:13.

Ezekiel 9:4-6 marks the faithful for preservation before judgment, echoing the remnant theme of the gleaning.

Ezekiel 12:16 says God will leave a few escapees—parallel to the gleanings remnant in Isaiah 24:13.