Jeremiah 49:5
Behold, I will bring a fear upon thee, saith the Lord God of hosts, from all those that be about thee; and ye shall be driven out every man right forth; and none shall gather up him that wandereth.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 49:37 applies the same terror-from-all-sides judgment to Elam, mirroring Ammon's threat in 49:5.
Jeremiah 49:29 ends with 'Terror on every side!' matching the terror brought from all around in this verse, a recurring judgment phrase.
In Jeremiah 46:5, 'terror on every side' and warriors fleeing — identical phrasing and theme to this judgment on Ammon.
Jeremiah 48:41-44 describes Moab's punishment with fleeing, pit, and snare, illustrating the same pattern of no escape from judgment.
In Isaiah 16:3, an appeal to shelter fugitives — in contrast, here no one will gather them. Opposite responses to refugees.
In 2 Kings 7:6, God causes terror via sounds of an army, leading to flight — parallel to the divinely induced terror causing flight here.
In 2 Kings 7:7, the Arameans flee in panic, abandoning everything — mirrors the driven away and no one gathering fugitives here.
In 2 Kings 19:7, God uses a report to cause Sennacherib's retreat — similar to terror from all around causing flight here.
In Obadiah 1:12-14, Edom attacks fugitives — similar theme of fugitives being left vulnerable, though here by neglect rather than violence.
In Job 15:21, sounds of terror fill the wicked's ears — thematic parallel to terror from all around causing flight here.
In Proverbs 28:1, the wicked flee though no one pursues — similar concept of fear causing flight, though here God sends the terror.