Jeremiah 50:25

The Lord hath opened his armoury, and hath brought forth the weapons of his indignation: for this is the work of the Lord God of hosts in the land of the Chaldeans.

Cross-reference

Jeremiah 50:15 calls for vengeance and notes Babylon's fall, directly continuing the scene of God opening his armoury.

Jeremiah 50:35-38 lists the sword judgments against Babylon—details the 'weapons of wrath' opened in 50:25.

Jeremiah 51:11 has God stirring up the Medes to sharpen arrows—executing the wrath from the opened arsenal.

Jeremiah 51:12 Related theme

Jeremiah 51:12 describes preparations for attack, reflecting human response to the weapons God has brought out.

Jeremiah 51:25 depicts God destroying the 'destroying mountain' Babylon, the target of the weapons from the armoury.

Jeremiah 51:55 Related theme

Jeremiah 51:55 announces the Lord spoiling Babylon, the accomplishment of the judgment prepared here.

Jeremiah 51:53 reinforces that no matter Babylon's height, God will bring destroyers—illustrating the certain outcome of the armory being opened.

Jeremiah 51:20 calls Babylon God's war club—contrasts with 50:25 where Babylon becomes the target of God's weapons.

Isaiah 13:2-5 depicts the Lord mustering his warriors against Babylon—directly parallels the opening of God's arsenal.

Isaiah 13:17 identifies the Medes as the instruments God uses, showing who wields the weapons from his armoury.

Isaiah 13:18 Related theme

Isaiah 13:18 describes the brutal effect of the Medes' weapons, echoing the destructive power of God's indignation.

Isaiah 14:22-24 prophesies Babylon's complete destruction, which the weapons of God's indignation execute.

Isaiah 48:14 identifies the one God loves (Cyrus) as the agent who will fulfill His purpose against Babylon, specifying the executor of the judgment.

Isaiah 48:15 continues: God calls and prospers this agent, providing the divine backing for the weapons brought out in Jeremiah 50:25.

Revelation 18:8 echoes the swift judgment of Babylon, applying the OT destruction typologically to the final fall of the world system.