Jeremiah 50:28
The voice of them that flee and escape out of the land of Babylon, to declare in Zion the vengeance of the Lord our God, the vengeance of his temple.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 50:15 directly commands vengeance on Babylon, which the fugitives announce in 50:28 as already accomplished.
Jeremiah 51:50 calls the escapees to remember Jerusalem, continuing the theme of fugitives proclaiming the LORD's deeds.
Jeremiah 51:51 laments the temple's defilement, which is the very reason for the vengeance declared in 50:28.
Jeremiah 30:16 promises that those who devour Israel will be devoured, mirroring God's vengeance on Babylon described here. Both are retribution against oppressors.
Jeremiah 51:6 also commands fleeing Babylon because it's the time of the LORD's vengeance, directly parallel to the escapees declaring vengeance here.
Jeremiah 51:24 says God will repay Babylon for their evil in Zion, directly linking to the vengeance for the temple mentioned here.
Isaiah 48:20 similarly commands fleeing Babylon and proclaiming redemption, matching the fugitives' declaration of vengeance.
In Lamentations 1:10, Babylon defiles the temple—the very offense that Jeremiah 50:28 says God later avenges on Babylon.
In Daniel 5:3-5, Belshazzar uses the temple vessels at his feast—the sacrilege that Jeremiah 50:28 says God avenged.
Psalm 94:1 calls on God as the one to whom vengeance belongs, directly connecting to the vengeance declared here for the temple.
Isaiah 47:3 pronounces vengeance on Babylon directly, the same theme as the vengeance declared here for the temple. Strong thematic link.
In Lamentations 2:7, God abandons his sanctuary to enemies—contrasted with Jeremiah 50:28 where he subsequently avenges that desecration.
In Lamentations 2:6, God destroys his own temple in judgment on Judah—opposite of Jeremiah 50:28 where he avenges it on Babylon.
In Daniel 5:23, Daniel rebukes Belshazzar for not honoring God—the pride that led to Babylon's fall, avenged per Jeremiah 50:28.
Habakkuk 2:8 declares Babylon will be plundered for plundering nations, reinforcing divine retribution on Babylon.