Isaiah 43:14
Thus saith the Lord, your redeemer, the Holy One of Israel; For your sake I have sent to Babylon, and have brought down all their nobles, and the Chaldeans, whose cry is in the ships.
Cross-reference
Isaiah 43:1 introduces God as Redeemer who calls Israel by name — 43:14 specifies the act of redeeming by sending to Babylon.
In Isaiah 43:3, God says He gives Egypt as ransom for Israel, reinforcing the same theme of substituting nations for His people as in 43:14.
Isaiah 43:4 declares Israel precious and that God gives peoples in exchange, directly echoing the substitutionary judgment in 43:14.
Isaiah 54:5-8 expands on the Redeemer theme, showing God’s everlasting compassion after judgment — the same redemptive purpose from 43:14.
Isaiah 44:6 repeats the titles 'Redeemer' and 'Holy One' and declares God alone — reinforcing the identity behind the redemption in 43:14.
Isaiah 45:1-5 names Cyrus as God's anointed to subdue nations, directly specifying the agent of the 'send to Babylon' in 43:14.
Isaiah 45:2 tells how God will level obstacles for Cyrus to conquer Babylon, directly fulfilling the judgment on Babylon here.
Isaiah 14:22 declares God will cut off Babylon's name and remnant, reinforcing the promised destruction here.
Isaiah 48:17 opens with the same divine self-identification 'your Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel', linking God's guidance to His redemptive role.
Isaiah 47:4 repeats 'Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel' in the context of Babylon's fall, echoing the same declaration.
Isaiah 41:14 uses the same title 'Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel', reinforcing God's identity as Israel's deliverer.
Isaiah 13:1 introduces an oracle against Babylon from the same prophet, setting the theme of Babylon's judgment.
Isaiah 44:24-28 reveals God raising Cyrus to restore Jerusalem, linking the Babylon judgment in 43:14 to future restoration.
Isaiah 45:4 similarly says God acts 'for the sake of' Jacob, showing His purpose in raising Cyrus for Israel's benefit.
Jeremiah 50:2-11 expands the prophecy against Babylon, detailing its fall and Israel's return, parallel to the judgment in 43:14.
Jeremiah 50:18 declares God will punish Babylon as He punished Assyria, directly paralleling the judgment action in 43:14.
Jeremiah 50:27-34 calls Babylon's fall vengeance for Israel and emphasizes God as Redeemer, mirroring the theme of 43:14.
Jeremiah 51:1-11 describes God stirring a destroyer against Babylon, fulfilling the judgment announced in 43:14.
Jeremiah 51 details Babylon's judgment, expanding on God's promise here to send against Babylon and bring down the Chaldeans.
Revelation 5:9 celebrates Christ’s redemption of all peoples — a NT fulfillment of the OT redemption pattern seen in 43:14’s deliverance from Babylon.
Jeremiah 50:34 declares God as strong Redeemer who will plead Israel's cause against Babylon, directly reinforcing the same theme.
Jeremiah 51:36 says God will take vengeance for Israel against Babylon, mirroring the action in Isaiah 43:14.
Revelation 18:21 depicts Babylon thrown down like a millstone, symbolically fulfilling the destruction of Babylon promised here.
Jeremiah 50:17 explains Babylon devoured Israel like a lion, providing the reason for the judgment proclaimed in 43:14.
Zephaniah 3:19 promises God will deal with all oppressors—a parallel theme of God acting against those who afflict His people.
Revelation 18:20 calls heaven to rejoice over Babylon's fall, echoing God's judgment on Babylon promised here.