Jeremiah 22:7
And I will prepare destroyers against thee, every one with his weapons: and they shall cut down thy choice cedars, and cast them into the fire.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 4:7 describes a lion/destroyer making land desolate, directly matching the consecrated destroyers cutting cedars here.
Jeremiah 21:14 speaks of kindling a fire in the forest to devour — same forest metaphor for judgment on Jerusalem's leaders.
Jeremiah 4:6 warns of disaster from the north, similar to the 'destroyers' God consecrates here — both announce imminent invasion.
Jeremiah 5:15 says God brings a distant nation against Israel — same as the destroyers sent here to cut down cedars.
Isaiah 10:3-7 identifies these destroyers as Assyria, God's rod of anger — specifying the instrument of judgment hinted at in Jeremiah.
Isaiah 10:33 depicts God lopping off boughs with terrifying power — the same tree-cutting imagery for judgment on the proud.
Isaiah 10:34 continues the forest imagery: Lebanon falls by the Majestic One — same chopping of cedars as in Jeremiah.
In Isaiah 37:24, the Assyrian king boasts of cutting down Lebanon's cedars, mirroring the destroyers God sends to cut cedars as judgment.
Isaiah 54:16 explicitly says God creates the destroyer to destroy — affirming divine sovereignty over the agents of judgment.
Isaiah 54:17 promises no weapon will succeed against God's people — contrasting the judgment where weapons do succeed.
Ezekiel 9:1-7 depicts God commanding executioners with weapons to slay Jerusalem's wicked — same imagery of divinely appointed destroyers.
In Zechariah 11:1, fire devouring Lebanon's cedars directly parallels the choicest cedars cut down and cast into fire.
Isaiah 13:3-5 shows God mustering his 'sanctified ones' as destroyers against Babylon — same divine warrior imagery but different target.
In Isaiah 27:11, the same imagery of dried branches burned as judgment on a people without discernment echoes the cutting and burning of choicest cedars.