Isaiah 29:7

And the multitude of all the nations that fight against Ariel, even all that fight against her and her munition, and that distress her, shall be as a dream of a night vision.

Cross-reference

Isaiah 29:2 Contrast

In Isaiah 29:2, God Himself brings distress to Ariel—contrasting with the nations' futile attack described here as a dream.

Isaiah 41:11 promises enemies incensed against Israel will be ashamed — echoing the fate of nations fighting Jerusalem here.

Isaiah 41:12 continues: those who war against Israel become nothing — parallel to the attacking nations vanishing like a dream.

In Isaiah 10:12, God promises to punish Assyria after using them—the same sovereign reversal that makes the nations' attack a dream.

Zechariah 12:3-5 shows Jerusalem as a burdensome stone that crushes attacking nations — a parallel prophecy of the same event.

Zechariah 14:1-3 predicts nations gathered against Jerusalem and God fighting for them — directly parallel to the scenario here.

Zechariah 14:12-15 details the plague on nations that fought Jerusalem — a specific parallel to the judgment implied in the dream imagery.

Job 20:8 Parallel

In Job 20:8, the wicked vanish 'as a dream of the night'—the same image of sudden disappearance used for the nations here.

Psalm 73:20 Parallel

In Psalm 73:20, the wicked's prosperity is 'as a dream when one awakes'—mirroring the nations' siege vanishing like a nightmare.

In Obadiah 1:16, nations become 'as though they had not been'—a parallel to the dream-like disappearance of enemies here.