Jeremiah 21:5
And I myself will fight against you with an outstretched hand and with a strong arm, even in anger, and in fury, and in great wrath.
Cross-reference
In Jeremiah 21:12, the same oracle warns that failure to do justice will ignite the wrath declared in v5.
In Jeremiah 21:13, God specifically targets the proud city He declares He will fight in v5.
In Jeremiah 44:6, the wrath and anger from v5 are described as already poured out, making Jerusalem a desolation.
In Jeremiah 36:7, the same great anger and wrath from v5 is cited to urge repentance.
In Jeremiah 32:5, the prophecy that Zedekiah will be taken to Babylon is a specific outcome of the judgment declared in v5.
Jeremiah 32:17 uses the same 'outstretched arm' for creation's power; here that power is turned to judgment.
Nahum 1:6 speaks of God's indignation and wrath poured out like fire — directly echoing the anger and fury here.
Exodus 6:6 uses 'outstretched arm' for Israel's redemption; in Jeremiah 21:5, the same phrase describes judgment—a stark contrast.
Ezekiel 20:34 repeats 'mighty hand and outstretched arm' in the context of gathering with wrath.
Ezekiel 20:33 uses the identical phrase 'mighty hand and outstretched arm' with wrath — mirroring God's power.
Lamentations 2:5 declares the Lord has become like an enemy—same idea as God personally fighting against His people in Jeremiah 21:5.
Lamentations 2:4 portrays God as an enemy bending His bow and pouring fury—directly echoes the divine wrath in Jeremiah 21:5.
Isaiah 63:10 describes God becoming an enemy and fighting against His people—identical theme to God fighting against Jerusalem in Jeremiah 21:5.
Isaiah 10:4 similarly closes with 'his hand is stretched out still' — the same judgment motif.
Isaiah 9:21 also ends with the refrain 'his hand is stretched out still' — linking to the outstretched hand imagery.
Isaiah 9:17 repeats the refrain 'his hand is stretched out still' — the same outstretched hand of God's judgment seen here.
Isaiah 5:25 describes God's stretched-out hand in anger against His people—identical imagery and theme of divine judgment.
Exodus 9:15 shows God's hand stretched out in judgment against Egypt—similar divine judgment against Jerusalem here.
In Ezekiel 5:8, a similar divine declaration 'I am against you' parallels God's fight against Jerusalem in v5.
Leviticus 26:28 describes God walking contrary in fury and disciplining sevenfold — the covenant curse background to this judgment.
In Lamentations 1:17, the Lord's command against Jacob echoes His fighting against Jerusalem in v5, now fulfilled in desolation.