Isaiah 29:2
Yet I will distress Ariel, and there shall be heaviness and sorrow: and it shall be unto me as Ariel.
Cross-reference
In Isaiah 29:7, the same judgment on Jerusalem is extended to her enemies who will vanish like a dream — a direct continuation of the prophecy.
Isaiah 5:25-30 describes God's anger bringing foreign invasion and darkness, matching the besieged 'Ariel' in 29:2 — both depict divine judgment on Judah.
Isaiah 10:5 explicitly names Assyria as the rod of God's anger — the instrument God uses to besiege Ariel in 29:2.
Isaiah 10:6 continues: God sends Assyria against a godless nation — directly identifying the agent of the siege on Ariel.
Isaiah 10:32 shows the Assyrian king shaking his fist at Jerusalem — the same siege God announced in 29:2.
Isaiah 33:7-9 portrays mourning and wasted land during invasion — directly echoing the lamentation at Ariel's siege in 29:2.
Isaiah 37:3 quotes Hezekiah calling this a day of distress — the very distress God promised to bring on Ariel in 29:2.
Jeremiah 32:28-29 prophesies Babylon's siege and burning of Jerusalem — a later parallel to the Assyrian siege of Ariel in 29:2.
In Ezekiel 24:3-13, Jerusalem is a boiling pot on a hearth—mirroring the altar-hearth (Ariel) image here for judgment.
In Ezekiel 22:31, God pours out wrath on Israel—this same divine indignation is promised here against Jerusalem.