Jeremiah 4:12
Even a full wind from those places shall come unto me: now also will I give sentence against them.
Cross-reference
In Jeremiah 1:16, the same phrase 'pronounce my judgments' appears, specifying idolatry as the reason—reinforcing that this wind declares God's case.
Jeremiah 13:24 echoes the same 'wind of the wilderness' scattering people like stubble, reinforcing God's judgment.
Jeremiah 51:1 uses the identical phrase 'destroying wind' against Babylon, mirroring God's judgment instrument.
Jeremiah 15:7 uses winnowing as judgment — contrasting with 4:12's wind not meant for winnowing but for destruction.
Ezekiel 7:8 says 'I will judge you according to your conduct'—directly echoes the pronouncement of judgments in Jeremiah.
Ezekiel 7:9 continues the judgment theme with 'I will repay you'—reinforcing the certainty of divine retribution.
Ezekiel 19:12 also depicts the east wind as a destructive force, drying up fruit — same judgment imagery.
Zechariah 7:14 describes God scattering Israel with a whirlwind, directly paralleling the judgment wind in Jeremiah.
Job 1:19 features a desert wind that destroys—same catastrophic imagery, though Job's wind is from Satan, not direct divine judgment.
Ezekiel 5:8 has God declaring 'I am against you' and inflicting punishment—similar divine judgment directed at Jerusalem.
Ezekiel 6:11-13 describes judgment by sword, famine, plague—the same divine retribution context as the wind of judgment.
Hosea 4:19 says 'the wind has wrapped her up' — a similar metaphor of wind as judgment carrying away the guilty.