Jeremiah 43:12
And I will kindle a fire in the houses of the gods of Egypt; and he shall burn them, and carry them away captives: and he shall array himself with the land of Egypt, as a shepherd putteth on his garment; and he shall go forth from thence in peace.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 43:13 continues the same prophecy, specifying the breaking of obelisks alongside burning temples.
Jeremiah 46:25 specifies punishment on Egypt's gods and Pharaoh — directly reinforcing the burning of Egypt's gods here.
In Jeremiah 50:2, a parallel prophecy declares Babylon's idols shattered — echoing the same judgment on Egypt's gods here.
Jeremiah 51:44 continues God's punishment on Bel in Babylon — a similar divine judgment on false gods as seen with Egypt's idols.
Jeremiah 51:18 declares idols worthless and subject to punishment — mirrors the judgment on Egyptian idols.
Jeremiah 48:7 describes Moab's god Chemosh going into captivity — a parallel judgment on a foreign deity, like the Egyptian gods here.
Exodus 12:12 records God's judgment on Egypt's gods at the Passover — a prior instance of the same divine action replayed here.
Isaiah 19:1 prophesies Egypt's idols trembling before the LORD — directly parallel to their destruction by Nebuchadnezzar here.
Isaiah 46:1 depicts Bel and Nebo bowed down, idols carried away — a parallel image of gods being taken captive as here.
Ezekiel 30:13 prophesies destruction of Egypt's idols in Memphis — a specific parallel to the burning of Egyptian temples here.
Hosea 10:6 has the calf of Samaria carried to Assyria as tribute — the same pattern of idols taken captive by a foreign power.
Isaiah 46:2 describes idols being carried into captivity — a direct parallel to the fate of Egypt's gods here.
Daniel 11:8 describes a later king carrying gods into Egypt, reversing the direction of captive idols here.
Zephaniah 2:11 declares God will destroy all gods of the earth — the same universal judgment seen in Egypt's defeated idols.
Hosea 8:6 pronounces judgment on Israel's calf idol, shattered by a metalworker — a similar fate for a different idol.
Isaiah 21:9 declares Babylon's idols shattered — a parallel judgment on a different nation's gods, showing God's universal sovereignty.
2 Samuel 5:21 shows David carrying off Philistine idols after victory — a similar pattern of conquering enemies' gods as here.