Jeremiah 51:25
Behold, I am against thee, O destroying mountain, saith the Lord, which destroyest all the earth: and I will stretch out mine hand upon thee, and roll thee down from the rocks, and will make thee a burnt mountain.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 51:20-23 depicts Babylon as God's hammer breaking nations – now the 'destroying mountain' is itself destroyed, showing God turns His tool into a target.
In Jeremiah 51:53, Babylon's attempt to 'mount up to heaven' is matched by God rolling down the destroying mountain – same pride-to-fall pattern.
Jeremiah 51:58 describes Babylon's walls leveled and gates burned – the physical fulfillment of making the 'destroying mountain' a burnt mountain.
Jeremiah 51:37 foretells Babylon becoming a heap of ruins, directly continuing the burning mountain imagery.
Jeremiah 51:62 declares Babylon cut off forever, concluding the judgment announced in this verse.
Jeremiah 51:7 calls Babylon a 'golden cup' making nations drunk – a different metaphor for Babylon's destructive role than the 'destroying mountain'.
Jeremiah 50:31 calls Babylon the 'proud one' – mirroring the 'destroying mountain' here. Both declare God's judgment on Babylon's arrogance.
Jeremiah 25:12 prophesies Babylon's punishment after seventy years, which this chapter's judgment expands on.
Jeremiah 50:12 describes Babylon's mother shamed and the land becoming desert, same judgment theme.
Jeremiah 50:15 calls for vengeance on Babylon as her walls fall, directly related to her destruction.
Jeremiah 50:25 depicts God opening his armory to bring wrath on Babylon, matching the judgment context.
Jeremiah 50:26 commands total destruction of Babylon, devoting her to ruin—fulfilling the same fate.
Revelation 18:10 declares Babylon's judgment has come in one hour, reinforcing Jeremiah's burnt mountain as a sudden, complete devastation.
Genesis 11:4 shows Babel's tower reaching heaven – the archetypal pride that the 'destroying mountain' Babylon repeats and God destroys.
Revelation 17:1-6 depicts Babylon as a harlot on many waters, a direct NT counterpart to Jeremiah's destroying mountain symbolizing the same end-time oppressor.
Daniel 4:30 records Nebuchadnezzar's boast over 'great Babylon' – the pride that makes Babylon a 'destroying mountain' before God humbles him.
Ezekiel 35:3 uses identical judgment language against Mount Seir, showing God's pattern against proud mountains.
Isaiah 47:14 also depicts Babylon's destruction by fire, echoing the burning mountain image here.
Nahum 2:13 also declares 'Behold, I am against you' against Nineveh, paralleling God's judgment on proud nations.
Isaiah 14:23 says God will make Babylon a possession of hedgehogs and pools, echoing the same total desolation imagery as Jeremiah's burnt mountain.
Isaiah 13:20 prophesies Babylon's permanent desolation, directly paralleling Jeremiah's burnt mountain as a scene of utter ruin and no habitation.