Jeremiah 25:27
Therefore thou shalt say unto them, Thus saith the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel; Drink ye, and be drunken, and spue, and fall, and rise no more, because of the sword which I will send among you.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 25:16 is the immediate predecessor in the same passage — drink, stagger, go mad from the sword.
Jeremiah 25:15 gives the original command to take the cup of wrath—this verse then instructs them to drink it.
Jeremiah 46:10 depicts the sword devouring and drunk with blood — linking sword and drunkenness imagery.
Jeremiah 13:13 uses the same 'fill with drunkenness' imagery for all Jerusalem's leaders—a direct parallel to the cup of wrath command here.
Jeremiah 48:26 uses the same 'make him drunk' and 'vomit' imagery against Moab—a direct parallel to the universal cup judgment here.
Jeremiah 51:39 promises to make Babylon drunk so they sleep forever—directly echoes the 'fall and rise no more' outcome here.
Jeremiah 51:57 also depicts making Babylon's leaders drunk to sleep forever—repeating the judgment of the cup of wrath.
Jeremiah 51:64 says Babylon will sink to rise no more—directly parallels the 'fall and rise no more' command for all nations here.
Deuteronomy 32:42 uses the same 'drunk with blood' imagery for God's sword—both depict divine judgment as intoxicating destruction.
Habakkuk 2:16 uses the same cup metaphor — drinking brings shame and exposure, a parallel judgment theme.
Lamentations 4:21 directly echoes the cup of wrath — Edom will drink, become drunk, and be stripped bare, just as Jeremiah prophesied.
Isaiah 63:6 shares the same cup of wrath imagery — God makes nations drunk in anger, pouring out their lifeblood.
Revelation 14:10 picks up the cup of God's wrath imagery, applied to end-time judgment, deepening the eschatological link.
Obadiah 1:16 directly expands on the cup theme — nations drink continually and become as if they never were, matching the judgment here.
Ezekiel 23:33 explicitly parallels the cup of desolation and ruin, using the same drunkenness imagery for judgment against nations.
Isaiah 51:17 uses the same 'cup of the Lord's wrath' imagery—Jerusalem must drink it to the dregs, echoing the judgment command here.
Isaiah 24:20 says the earth staggers like a drunkard and falls to rise no more—identical imagery to the 'drink and fall' judgment.
Isaiah 19:14 describes Egypt staggering like a drunkard in vomit—the same vivid drunkenness and judgment imagery as here.
Psalm 75:8 explicitly uses the cup of God's wrath that the wicked drink—directly parallel to the 'drink and stagger' judgment here.
Isaiah 51:17 uses the same cup of wrath metaphor but for Jerusalem, contrasting with the nations here forced to drink.
Amos 8:14 uses the phrase 'fall and never rise again' for idolaters, echoing the irreversible downfall from drinking God's cup.
In Lamentations 3:15, the same bitter-drink metaphor depicts personal affliction, while here it is national judgment from the cup of God's wrath.