Jeremiah 13:14
And I will dash them one against another, even the fathers and the sons together, saith the Lord: I will not pity, nor spare, nor have mercy, but destroy them.
Cross-reference
In Jeremiah 6:21, the same image of fathers and sons stumbling together over God's stumblingblocks expands on the family destruction in judgment.
Jeremiah 19:9-11 uses breaking a flask and cannibalism; here dashing people together. Same violent judgment theme.
Jeremiah 21:7 uses the identical phrase 'not spare, nor have pity, nor have mercy' for judgment on Zedekiah, reinforcing the severity.
In Jeremiah 19:11, the same image of shattering a potter's vessel pictures God's irreversible judgment on Jerusalem.
Ezekiel 9:5 commands the executioners 'let not your eye spare, neither have ye pity,' applying the same divine command to human agents of judgment.
Psalm 2:9 uses 'dash in pieces' for judgment on nations; here God dashes people. Shared language and imagery.
Isaiah 9:20 depicts people devouring their own; here God dashes them together. Both show internal destruction.
Ezekiel 8:18 repeats the exact declaration 'mine eye shall not spare, neither will I have pity,' reinforcing the irreversible judgment theme.
In Ezekiel 7:9, the same phrase 'mine eye shall not spare, neither will I have pity' directly echoes God's refusal to show mercy in judgment.
Ezekiel 24:14 says 'I will not go back, neither will I spare,' closely matching the no-mercy declaration, emphasizing God's unfaltering judgment.
Ezekiel 9:10 again states 'mine eye shall not spare, neither will I have pity,' linking this specific phrase to recompense on their heads.
Ezekiel 5:10 intensifies family destruction to cannibalism — both show God's judgment bringing family members against each other.
Ezekiel 5:11 repeats 'neither shall mine eye spare, neither will I have any pity' — direct verbal parallel for defiling the sanctuary.
Ezekiel 7:4 echoes 'mine eye shall not spare, neither will I have pity' — same divine judgment formula for recompensing ways.
Hosea 2:4 declares God will not have mercy on the children of whoredoms, using the same 'no mercy' language as Jeremiah 13:14 against faithless Israel.
Deuteronomy 32:43 promises God will 'be merciful unto his land, and to his people,' contrasting directly with Jeremiah's declaration of no mercy in judgment.
Hosea 10:14 describes mothers dashed in pieces with their children—the exact imagery of Jeremiah 13:14's fathers and sons smashed together.
Zechariah 11:6 says God will no longer pity the land and will deliver people into neighbors' hands—fulfilling the 'no pity' and mutual destruction of Jeremiah 13:14.
Lamentations 4:11 says the LORD poured out his fierce anger and kindled a fire in Zion—the same divine fury that drives the indiscriminate destruction in Jeremiah 13:14.
Lamentations 2:21 mourns that God killed all ages and 'did not pity,' matching Jeremiah 13:14's slaughter of fathers and sons without mercy.
Lamentations 2:2 describes the Lord swallowing Jacob's dwellings without pity, directly echoing the 'no pity' decree in Jeremiah 13:14.
Isaiah 30:14 says 'he shall not spare' and depicts a shattered vessel, echoing both the no-mercy theme and the dashing imagery of Jeremiah 13:14.
Deuteronomy 29:20 warns of God not sparing the individual covenant breaker — a broader covenant curse parallel to no-pity judgment.
Matthew 10:21 depicts family betrayal in persecution, echoing the family division motif but from human action rather than direct divine judgment.