Jeremiah 27:7
And all nations shall serve him, and his son, and his son’s son, until the very time of his land come: and then many nations and great kings shall serve themselves of him.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 51:64 ends the Babylon oracle, declaring the completion of judgment — confirming the outcome promised here.
Jeremiah 50:10 adds that Babylon will be plundered—details of the judgment on Babylon mentioned here.
Jeremiah 25:11-14 specifies the seventy-year limit and subsequent punishment of Babylon—the same timeline and outcome referenced here.
Jeremiah 25:12 explicitly states God's punishment of Babylon after seventy years—the same event forecast here.
Jeremiah 25:14 repeats the promise that Babylon will be enslaved by many nations, reinforcing the temporary nature of servitude to Babylon.
Jeremiah 50:1 introduces the oracle against Babylon, detailing the judgment that fulfills the prediction here of Babylon's downfall.
Jeremiah 50:9 describes the alliance of nations that will conquer Babylon—fulfilling the subjugation predicted here.
Jeremiah 28:14 repeats the same prophecy—nations must serve Nebuchadnezzar, reinforcing the yoke imagery here.
Jeremiah 29:10 gives the seventy-year timeline for Babylon's downfall, matching 'until the time of his own land comes' here.
Jeremiah 30:8 promises the breaking of Babylon's yoke on Israel—the deliverance that follows the servitude described here.
In Revelation 18:2-3, Babylon's fall is announced with all nations drinking her wine—the judgment Jeremiah foresaw.
2 Chronicles 36:20 confirms that Judah served Babylon's kings until Persia conquered—fulfilling the prophecy of service to Nebuchadnezzar's dynasty.
In Revelation 16:19, Babylon is made to drink God's wrath—directly echoing the subjugation of Babylon in Jeremiah.
In Revelation 14:8, Babylon's fall is proclaimed—fulfilling the judgment Jeremiah predicted on the historical oppressor.
In Habakkuk 2:7, the same pattern: the plunderer of nations will itself be plundered—directly echoing Nebuchadnezzar's eventual subjugation.
Daniel 5:25 records the handwriting on the wall judgment on Belshazzar — immediate fulfillment of Babylon's fall.
Isaiah 47:1-5 taunts Babylon's humiliation — mirrors the reversal of power described here.
Isaiah 21:9 announces 'Fallen, fallen is Babylon' — the exact event this prophecy points to.
Isaiah 14:23 describes Babylon becoming desolate — matches the destruction implied in this prophecy.
Isaiah 14:22 declares God will cut off Babylon's name and remnant — directly parallels the total enslavement.
Isaiah 14:4-6 taunts Babylon's oppressor being broken, echoing the same fate for Babylon that is prophesied here.
Isaiah 13:8-22 depicts the terror and destruction of Babylon's fall — vivid parallel to the coming judgment.
Psalm 137:8 directly addresses Babylon's doom, blessing those who repay her — same retribution promised here.
Daniel 2:37 affirms Nebuchadnezzar's God-given rule over all nations—the foundation for the servitude commanded here.
Daniel 5:26 records the fulfillment: Babylon's kingdom is numbered and finished, matching the 'time of his own land comes'.
Daniel 9:2 explicitly cites Jeremiah's prophecy about seventy years, linking to the timing of Babylon's end.
Habakkuk 2:8 declares that those who plundered nations will be plundered, matching Jeremiah's prediction that Babylon will be enslaved.