Isaiah 30:30

And the Lord shall cause his glorious voice to be heard, and shall shew the lighting down of his arm, with the indignation of his anger, and with the flame of a devouring fire, with scattering, and tempest, and hailstones.

Cross-reference

In Isaiah 30:31, the voice of the LORD directly beats down Assyria — a specific application of the theophany described in 30:30.

Isaiah 51:9 Parallel

Isaiah 51:9 calls on the arm of the LORD to awake, using the same 'arm' imagery for God's power seen here in judgment.

Isaiah 29:6 Parallel

Isaiah 29:6 uses the same storm and fire imagery—thunder, earthquake, whirlwind, devouring flame—as the divine judgment described here.

Isaiah 28:2 Parallel

Isaiah 28:2 uses identical storm, hail, and tempest language for God's judgment, reinforcing the same imagery here.

Isaiah 37:36 Prophetic fulfillment

In Isaiah 37:36, the angel smites the Assyrian army — a historical fulfillment of the judgment proclaimed in 30:30 against Assyria.

Isaiah 17:13 uses storm imagery (whirlwind, rushing waters) for God's rebuke — similar to the tempest and scattering here.

Isaiah 14:25 prophesies God breaking Assyria in His land — the same judgment carried out by the storm here.

Isaiah 10:25 Related theme

Isaiah 10:25 speaks of God's indignation ceasing — the same divine anger manifested in the storm here.

Isaiah 10:12 promises God will punish Assyria — the same enemy facing the storm judgment described here.

Psalm 29:3-5 portrays the Lord's voice thundering over waters and breaking cedars, paralleling the voice and destructive power in this passage.

Ezekiel 10:5 also describes God's voice as mighty — the sound of cherubim wings like the voice of the Almighty, echoing the glorious voice here.

Ezekiel 38:19-22 includes hailstones, fire, and brimstone rained down in judgment — a very close parallel to this storm imagery.

Psalm 97:3-5 has fire, lightning, and melting hills at the Lord's presence — directly mirroring the storm theophany here.

Psalm 50:1-3 depicts God coming with devouring fire and tempest — echoing this same theophanic judgment scene.

Nahum 1:2-6 portrays God in whirlwind and storm with mountains quaking — a thorough parallel to this divine judgment scene.

Revelation 16:18-21 explicitly mirrors the hail, lightning, thunder, and earthquake—a direct apocalyptic parallel.

Psalm 18:13 Parallel

Psalm 18:13 describes the Lord thundering with hailstones and coals of fire, directly paralleling the hailstones and voice of judgment here.

Joshua 10:11 Historical context

Joshua 10:11 recounts God casting hailstones on Israel's enemies, a historical precedent for the hail judgment here.

In 1 Samuel 7:10, God thunders against the Philistines — same divine storm imagery used here to display His power in battle.

Job 40:9 Parallel

Job 40:9 asks about God's arm and thunderous voice, directly corresponding to the descending arm and majestic voice of judgment here.

Luke 1:51 Parallel

Luke 1:51 describes God scattering the proud with his arm, directly echoing the scattering and arm imagery in this verse.

Job 37:2-5 describes God's thunderous voice and storm, closely mirroring the majestic voice, cloudburst, and storm imagery in this verse.

2 Thessalonians 1:8 depicts Christ's return with flaming fire to take vengeance — echoing this same fiery judgment imagery.

Revelation 1:15 portrays Christ's voice like the roar of many waters, paralleling the glorious voice and fire imagery in this judgment scene.

Revelation 11:19 echoes the same theophanic storm imagery—lightning, thunder, hail—depicting divine judgment.

Exodus 9:23 Parallel

Exodus 9:23 recounts the plague of hail with thunder and fire—the same divine judgment pattern as in Isaiah 30:30.

Revelation 8:5 depicts thunder, lightning, and earthquake from the altar, mirroring the theophanic judgment elements.

Zechariah 9:14 uses similar storm theophany (lightning, trumpet, storm) as a divine warrior image, echoing the judgment scene.

In Ezekiel 38:22, God rains hailstones, fire, and brimstone on Gog — the same stormy judgment as in 30:30.

Amos 1:14 Parallel

In Amos 1:14, God kindles fire with shouting and tempest against Rabbah — tempest and fire parallel the judgment storm in 30:30.

Revelation 16:21 describes great hailstones as a plague, matching the hailstones in this judgment scene.

In Ezekiel 13:13, God sends stormy wind, overflowing rain, and great hailstones in anger — near-identical language to 30:30's tempest and hail.

Psalm 83:15 Parallel

Psalm 83:15 implores God to use tempest and storm against enemies — the same storm imagery of divine judgment here.

Job 38:23 Related theme

Job 38:23 reveals God stores hail for times of judgment — the same hailstones used in the storm here.

2 Chronicles 32:21 Prophetic fulfillment

2 Chronicles 32:21 parallels 2 Kings 19:35, describing the same angelic destruction of Assyria—fulfilling Isaiah's prophecy.

2 Kings 19:35 Prophetic fulfillment

2 Kings 19:35 records the angel striking Assyria—the historical fulfillment of the judgment prophesied in Isaiah 30:30.

1 Kings 19:11 shows God not in wind, earthquake, or fire—contrasting with Isaiah 30:30 where God's judgment is in those.

2 Samuel 22:14 says 'The LORD thundered from heaven'—directly matching the majestic voice and thunder imagery.

Psalm 46:6 Parallel

Psalm 46:6 shows God uttering his voice and melting the earth, echoing the majestic voice and devastating power described here.

Psalm 18:14 Parallel

Psalm 18:14 adds arrows and lightnings to the storm imagery, reinforcing God's arm and flame of fire in this judgment scene.

Psalm 98:1 Contrast

Psalm 98:1 celebrates God's holy arm for salvation, while here his arm brings judgment — same symbol, different outcome.

Psalm 2:5 Parallel

In Psalm 2:5, God speaks in wrath and terrifies in fury, closely matching the furious anger and judgment voice of this verse.

Matthew 24:27 likens the Son of Man's coming to lightning, paralleling the lightning imagery of divine judgment here.

Revelation 6:12-17 describes the great day of wrath with cosmic upheaval — a parallel eschatological judgment but with different specific imagery.

Deuteronomy 9:3 speaks of God as a consuming fire, paralleling the 'flame of devouring fire' in Isaiah 30:30.

Exodus 15:16 shows God's arm causing terror at the Red Sea, a past deliverance paralleling the judgment arm here.