Jeremiah 25:14

For many nations and great kings shall serve themselves of them also: and I will recompense them according to their deeds, and according to the works of their own hands.

Cross-reference

Jeremiah 25:12 directly states God will punish Babylon after seventy years, parallel to this repayment promise.

Jeremiah 27:7 repeats the same promise: many nations and great kings will eventually serve themselves of Babylon, matching the recompense here.

Jeremiah 50:9 Prophetic fulfillment

Jeremiah 50:9 details the assembly of great nations from the north that will attack Babylon, fulfilling the 'many nations' who serve themselves of her.

Jeremiah 50:29–34 Prophetic fulfillment

Jeremiah 50:29-34 expands on Babylon's punishment in detail, applying the same recompense promised earlier in Jeremiah 25:14.

Jeremiah 50:41 describes the people from the north and many kings raised up against Babylon, directly paralleling the invading nations here.

Jeremiah 51:6 Related theme

Jeremiah 51:6 calls for flight from Babylon because the Lord's vengeance recompenses her, echoing the recompense promised in this verse.

Jeremiah 51:20-27 portrays Babylon as God's weapon then punished, reinforcing the theme of repayment for evil done to Zion.

Jeremiah 51:27 summons nations like Ararat to fight Babylon, illustrating the 'many nations' that will serve themselves of her as stated here.

Jeremiah 51:28 continues the summoning of nations, specifically the kings of the Medes, against Babylon — a concrete outworking of this prophecy.

Jeremiah 51:35–41 Prophetic fulfillment

Jeremiah 51:35-41 specifies Babylon's desolation as the fulfillment of the violent recompense promised against her.

Jeremiah 51:7 uses the same cup imagery for Babylon's judgment, reinforcing this repayment context.

Revelation 18:6 applies the same retributive measure to Babylon the Great, using the OT pattern of repayment as a typological model.

Psalm 137:8 Parallel

Psalm 137:8 voices the same desire for retribution against Babylon, calling blessed the one who repays her as she served Israel.

Habakkuk 2:8-16 elaborates on Babylon's guilt and the principle of recompense, echoing the same divine retribution against Babylon.

Daniel 5:28 Prophetic fulfillment

Daniel 5:28 records the actual moment of Babylon's fall, showing the fulfillment of Jeremiah's prophecy that Babylon would be enslaved.

Isaiah 45:1–3 Prophetic fulfillment

Isaiah 45:1-3 identifies Cyrus as the instrument of Babylon's downfall, providing the specific agent of the judgment Jeremiah 25:14 announces.

Habakkuk 1:5 announces Babylon as God's instrument, while here Babylon faces judgment—God's twofold sovereignty.