Isaiah 44:27

That saith to the deep, Be dry, and I will dry up thy rivers:

Cross-reference

Isaiah 11:15 depicts God drying up waters for a new exodus, using the same imagery of power over rivers and the deep.

Isaiah 11:16 follows with a highway for the remnant after drying waters, reinforcing the exodus-restoration motif.

Isaiah 42:15 describes God drying up rivers and pools, sharing the same metaphor of divine control over waters.

Isaiah 43:16 recalls God making a path through the sea, paralleling the power over deep waters shown in Isaiah 44:27.

Isaiah 51:15 shows God stirring the sea—different action but same theme of divine control over waters.

Psalm 74:15 Parallel

Psalm 74:15 explicitly says God dried up ever-flowing streams—direct parallel to drying rivers in Isaiah 44:27.

Jeremiah 50:38 declares a drought against Babylon’s waters—same judgment motif of God drying up rivers.

Jeremiah 51:36 repeats 'I will dry up her sea'—direct fulfillment of the same divine action against Babylon.

Revelation 16:12 applies the same drying of the Euphrates typologically—OT pattern fulfilled in end-times judgment.

Joshua 4:22 Parallel

Joshua 4:22 recalls God drying the Jordan—historical instance of the same power Isaiah 44:27 proclaims.

Psalm 107:33 says God turns rivers into desert—direct thematic parallel to drying rivers.

Ezekiel 30:12 echoes God drying up Egypt's rivers — a direct parallel to God drying deep waters in this verse.

Nahum 1:4 Parallel

Nahum 1:4 similarly depicts God rebuking the sea and drying rivers — reinforcing God's power over waters.