Jeremiah 49:29
Their tents and their flocks shall they take away: they shall take to themselves their curtains, and all their vessels, and their camels; and they shall cry unto them, Fear is on every side.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 49:32 continues the same oracle with camels taken and 'calamity from every side' — directly parallel within this prophecy.
Jeremiah 6:25 uses the exact phrase 'fear is on every side'—a signature Jeremiah expression, here applied to Kedar as it was to Judah.
Jeremiah 20:3 gives the name Magor-missabib ('terror on every side')—the same phrase closing this verse, linking Kedar's fate to Jeremiah's personal symbol.
Jeremiah 46:5 uses the identical phrase 'terror on every side' in the oracle against Egypt — a direct echo of the same cry of panic.
Jeremiah 4:20 laments the destruction of Judah's tents, paralleling the same imagery of tent destruction for Kedar in judgment.
Jeremiah 10:20 also mourns the destruction of tents and loss of children, using the same tent imagery as the judgment on Kedar.
Judges 6:5 describes Midianites with tents and camels like locusts—identical nomadic invasion imagery to the plunder of Kedar here.
1 Chronicles 5:21 records taking 50,000 camels from Hagarites—identical plunder of camels and flocks as in this judgment on Kedar.
Psalm 31:13 also has 'terror on every side' as David's lament over scheming enemies — exact same phrase, personal context.
Isaiah 60:7 promises flocks of Kedar brought to Jerusalem as offerings — a future blessing in contrast to the judgment here where they are taken.
Habakkuk 3:7 sees tents of Cushan and curtains of Midian in affliction, directly paralleling the judgment on desert tribes with tent and curtain imagery.