Isaiah 34:4

And all the host of heaven shall be dissolved, and the heavens shall be rolled together as a scroll: and all their host shall fall down, as the leaf falleth off from the vine, and as a falling fig from the fig tree.

Cross-reference

In Isaiah 13:10, the stars and luminaries go dark — a close parallel to the heavenly host rotting and skies rolling up in Isa 34:4, both depicting cosmic collapse at judgment.

Isaiah 51:6 Parallel

Isaiah 51:6 says heavens will vanish like smoke and earth wear out, closely paralleling the scroll‑rolling dissolution here in the same prophetic tradition.

Revelation 20:11 shows earth and sky fleeing God's presence, similar to Isaiah's heavens rolling up as a scroll at final judgment.

Psalm 102:26 says the heavens will wear out like a garment — almost identical imagery to the skies rolling up like a scroll in Isa 34:4, both using clothing metaphors for the heavens' end.

Revelation 6:14 explicitly repeats 'the sky rolled up like a scroll' from Isaiah 34:4, fulfilling the apocalyptic imagery.

Revelation 6:13 quotes Isaiah 34:4's image of stars falling like unripe figs from a fig tree, directly applying the prophecy to end‑times judgment.

2 Peter 3:7-12 describes the heavens destroyed by fire and elements melting, directly echoing Isaiah's dissolving heavens and rolling scroll.

Mark 13:25 Parallel

Mark 13:25 directly states stars falling from heaven — a clear parallel to the star imagery in Isaiah.

Matthew 24:29 explicitly echoes this: stars fall from heaven and powers are shaken — a direct NT parallel to Isaiah's prophecy.

Joel 3:15 Parallel

Joel 3:15 says the stars withdraw their shining — a very close parallel to the stars falling in Isaiah.

Ezekiel 32:8 also speaks of darkening all bright lights of heaven — reinforcing the same celestial judgment imagery.

Ezekiel 32:7 echoes this image: God darkens the stars as judgment — a direct parallel to the dissolving stars in Isaiah.

In Hebrews 1:11, creation wears out like a garment — parallels the heavens rolling up like a scroll, both using clothing imagery for transience.

Joel 2:10 Parallel

In Joel 2:10, the heavens tremble, sun and moon darken, stars stop shining — very similar cosmic collapse imagery.

In 2 Peter 3:12, the heavens are destroyed by fire, elements melt — directly parallels the cosmic dissolution imagery.

In 2 Peter 3:11, the destruction of the heavens leads to an ethical call — adds the moral implication of cosmic dissolution.

Jeremiah 4:23 depicts earth formless and heavens dark — parallel to the cosmic dissolution in Isa 34:4, both showing judgment as uncreation.