Isaiah 32:10
Many days and years shall ye be troubled, ye careless women: for the vintage shall fail, the gathering shall not come.
Cross-reference
Isaiah 3:17-26 describes the same judgment on the daughters of Zion for their complacency — both address the women's coming loss.
Isaiah 7:23 depicts the land overgrown with briers — a parallel agricultural desolation as judgment.
In Isaiah 16:10, similar language of failed vintage and silenced joy in Moab's judgment echoes this same harvest failure.
Isaiah 24:7-12 laments the failure of wine and harvest globally — a broader parallel to the specific vintage failure here.
In Jeremiah 8:13, God takes away the harvest and fruit as judgment, matching the vintage failure here.
In Hosea 2:12, God destroys vines and fig trees as punishment for unfaithfulness — same theme of vine destruction.
In Joel 1:7, locusts lay waste vines and fig trees, directly paralleling the failed vintage here.
In Joel 1:12, the vine dries up and joy withers — identical imagery of agricultural collapse.
In Habakkuk 3:17, the same list of vine and fig tree failure appears, though there it is a context of faith despite loss.
In Zephaniah 1:13, planting vineyards but not drinking wine echoes the failed vintage and judgment here.
In Joel 1:5, drunkards are called to weep because sweet wine is cut off — directly tied to the vintage failure here.
Jeremiah 25:10 removes all joy and abundance — a parallel judgment of deprivation, though less focused on harvest.