Isaiah 30:14
And he shall break it as the breaking of the potters’ vessel that is broken in pieces; he shall not spare: so that there shall not be found in the bursting of it a sherd to take fire from the hearth, or to take water withal out of the pit.
Cross-reference
In Isaiah 47:14, Babylon's destruction leaves no coal for warmth — same imagery of complete ruin with nothing useful remaining.
Psalm 2:9 uses the same potter's vessel imagery to describe dashing nations — a direct parallel to this shattering judgment.
In Jeremiah 13:14, the same ruthless shattering—dashing people together without pity—mirrors the complete destruction here.
Jeremiah 19:10 breaks a potter's flask as a prophetic sign — mirroring the irreversible shattering described here.
Jeremiah 19:11 adds that the broken flask cannot be repaired — exactly the irreparable ruin depicted here.
In Jeremiah 48:38, Moab is broken like a worthless vessel — identical imagery of God shattering a nation as a potter breaks pottery.
Revelation 2:27 cites Psalm 2:9 with the potter's vessel imagery — applying the same image of crushing judgment.
Hosea 8:8 describes Israel as a 'useless vessel' among nations, directly paralleling the broken potter's vessel rendered useless here.
Lamentations 4:2 compares people to earthen pots, a similar potter's vessel metaphor for judgment, though emphasizing devaluation rather than shattering.
Proverbs 29:1 warns of sudden destruction without remedy for the stubborn — same concept of irreversible judgment as the smashed pot.
Jeremiah 30:15 speaks of an incurable wound due to sin, paralleling the irreversible shattering of the potter's vessel here.
In Ezekiel 15:3-8, Israel is worthless vine wood fit only for burning — parallel theme of uselessness leading to total destruction.
In Romans 11:21, God not sparing the natural branches is a direct warning—parallel to the unsparing judgment theme.