Jeremiah 25:30
Therefore prophesy thou against them all these words, and say unto them, The Lord shall roar from on high, and utter his voice from his holy habitation; he shall mightily roar upon his habitation; he shall give a shout, as they that tread the grapes, against all the inhabitants of the earth.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 2:15 uses roaring lions as metaphor for enemies laying waste; here God himself roars in judgment.
Deuteronomy 26:15 uses 'holy dwelling' in a prayer for blessing, directly opposing the judgment pronounced from that same dwelling here.
Revelation 19:15 shows Christ treading the winepress of God's wrath—directly connecting to the judgment shout of 25:30.
Psalm 78:65 depicts the Lord awakening and shouting like a strong man after wine—mirroring the 'shout like those treading grapes' in 25:30.
Isaiah 42:13 depicts the LORD shouting like a warrior, matching the roaring and shouting against the earth here.
Hosea 5:14 portrays God as a lion tearing prey — a similar metaphor of divine judgment as the roaring in this verse.
Revelation 14:18-20 pictures the winepress of God's wrath—the ultimate fulfillment of the grape-treading judgment foreshadowed in 25:30.
Zechariah 2:13 calls for silence because the LORD has roused himself from his holy dwelling—very similar imagery to 25:30.
Joel 3:16 uses nearly identical phrasing—'roar from Zion, thunder from Jerusalem'—and adds God as a refuge for His people.
Amos 1:2 closely parallels the roar and thunder from Zion, with the added image of withering pastures and Carmel.
Hosea 11:10 directly depicts God roaring like a lion to summon his people — the same divine roaring image used here.
2 Chronicles 30:27 mentions prayer reaching heaven, God's holy dwelling—same phrase but in a context of blessing, not judgment.
Revelation 10:3 features a mighty angel roaring like a lion, echoing the prophetic roar but with a different agent.
Amos 3:8 uses the lion's roar as a metaphor for God's word, emphasizing the inevitability of prophecy—a parallel to the roar of judgment.
Joel 2:11-13 echoes the thunder of judgment but adds a call to repentance, contrasting with the purely punitive tone here.
Hosea 13:8 intensifies the predator imagery with a bear and lion tearing, paralleling the violent judgment.
Hosea 13:7 adds the image of God as a lion/leopard lurking, echoing the roar of judgment with a predator metaphor.
Psalm 11:4 also locates God's throne in his holy temple, reinforcing the divine origin of the judgment roar.