Jeremiah 4:11
At that time shall it be said to this people and to Jerusalem, A dry wind of the high places in the wilderness toward the daughter of my people, not to fan, nor to cleanse,
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 23:19 describes a storm of the Lord's wrath – same destructive wind imagery as the hot wind here.
Jeremiah 30:23 repeats the storm-of-the-Lord metaphor – identical judgment imagery to the scorching wind here.
Jeremiah 13:24 explicitly uses the same desert wind image to scatter like chaff — a direct parallel to the destructive wind.
Jeremiah 15:7 has God winnowing his people, while 4:11 says the wind is not for winnowing — contrast between purifying and destructive judgment.
Jeremiah 22:22 says wind will drive away shepherds, applying the wind metaphor to the exile of leaders.
Jeremiah 51:1 speaks of stirring up a destroyer spirit against Babylon – same wind/judgment motif but different target.
Jeremiah 51:2 uses winnowing imagery for judgment on Babylon, while here the wind is not for winnowing — a contrasting application of the same metaphor.
Ezekiel 19:12 describes the east wind drying up fruit, the same judgment imagery.
Ezekiel 17:10 uses the east wind to wither a vine, mirroring the destructive wind of judgment.
Lamentations 4:10 describes horrors during the 'destruction of the daughter of my people', a direct echo of the judgment.
Lamentations 4:6 mentions the 'chastisement of the daughter of my people' greater than Sodom, reinforcing the severity of judgment.
Lamentations 3:48 uses the identical phrase 'destruction of the daughter of my people' from this verse.
Lamentations 2:11 also mourns the 'destruction of the daughter of my people', directly linking to this judgment.
In Isaiah 27:8, the east wind is God's fierce breath of judgment, reinforcing the destructive wind imagery.
Hosea 13:15 explicitly mentions the east wind from the wilderness, the same judgment motif.
Hosea 4:19 says a wind will sweep them away, directly paralleling the destructive wind of judgment.
Habakkuk 1:9 describes hordes advancing like a desert wind, reinforcing the desert wind as a symbol of invasion.
In Zechariah 7:14, a whirlwind scattering parallels the hot wind of judgment—both depict God's destructive wind against His people.
Matthew 3:12 presents Jesus' winnowing judgment (separating wheat from chaff), while here the wind is explicitly not for winnowing — a contrast in the purpose of judgment.
Luke 3:17 has the same winnowing metaphor as Matthew 3:12, contrasting with this verse's statement that the wind is not for winnowing.
In Isaiah 22:4, the same phrase 'daughter of my people' appears in a lament over destruction, echoing the judgment theme here.
Isaiah 41:16 describes wind winnowing and scattering enemies, whereas here the wind is destructive, not for winnowing — a contrast in the use of the wind metaphor.
In Job 1:19, a destructive wind from the desert suddenly kills, reinforcing the image of natural disaster as divine judgment.