Isaiah 24:3
The land shall be utterly emptied, and utterly spoiled: for the Lord hath spoken this word.
Cross-reference
Isaiah 24:1 declares the LORD makes the earth empty; 24:3 repeats that the land will be utterly emptied. Direct reinforcement of the same judgment.
Isaiah 6:11 describes the land utterly desolate with no inhabitant — directly parallel to the total emptying of the land in Isaiah 24:3.
In Deuteronomy 29:23, the land becomes brimstone and salt, a burning waste—echoing the utter desolation decreed here.
Micah 4:4 promises peace and security under vine and fig tree, as the LORD has spoken—contrasting the devastation declared here.
Jeremiah 4:27 also declares the whole land a desolation by divine decree, though with a promise it won't be total—very close parallel.
Ezekiel 12:20 says cities will be laid waste and the land desolate — a direct parallel to the earth being utterly empty and plundered here.
In Ezekiel 15:8, God makes the land desolate because of faithlessness — echoing the same cause and effect as the global judgment here.
Micah 2:4 laments 'we are utterly ruined' and fields removed — a close parallel to the earth being utterly empty and plundered here.
Micah 7:13 directly states the earth will be desolate because of its inhabitants — a clear thematic parallel to this verse's global judgment.
2 Chronicles 36:21 shows the land enjoying its sabbaths in desolation, fulfilling God's spoken word—mirroring the divine decree here.
Deuteronomy 29:28 describes the LORD uprooting Israel into exile—a historical instance of the earth being emptied as judgment.
Jeremiah 52:27 records Judah taken into exile — a specific fulfillment of the same principle of judgment and desolation as the earth's emptying here.
In Ezekiel 36:4, the mountains of Israel are desolate and plundered—a localized example of the earth's fate described here.
Joel 1:10 describes fields devastated and the ground mourning — a similar agricultural desolation that parallels the earth being plundered here.