Jeremiah 51:27
Set ye up a standard in the land, blow the trumpet among the nations, prepare the nations against her, call together against her the kingdoms of Ararat, Minni, and Ashchenaz; appoint a captain against her; cause the horses to come up as the rough caterpillers.
Cross-reference
In Jeremiah 51:12, setting up a standard on Babylon's walls parallels the call to raise a standard against her.
In Jeremiah 51:11, the call to sharpen arrows and the Medes' role echoes the muster of nations here against Babylon.
In Jeremiah 51:2, God sends winnowers against Babylon — same judgment context, reinforcing the coming destruction.
Jeremiah 50:42 describes the attackers' horses and terrifying advance against Babylon — this verse calls those attackers to assemble.
In Jeremiah 50:41, the northern coalition against Babylon is the same gathering commanded in 51:27.
In Jeremiah 25:14, the Lord promised repayment for Babylon; here that repayment is initiated with a call to arms.
In Jeremiah 50:2, setting up a standard and proclaiming Babylon's fall matches the call to raise a standard against her.
In Jeremiah 50:26, the attack on Babylon continues with 'come against her from the utmost border' — same call to destroy.
In Jeremiah 50:14, the call to draw battle lines against Babylon is repeated, reinforcing the command here.
In Jeremiah 50:9, a company of great nations from the north is stirred up against Babylon — expanding on the coalition called here.
In Jeremiah 4:6, the same 'raise a banner, disaster from the north' warned Judah; now the language is used against Babylon itself.
In Jeremiah 49:14, the same 'gather nations for battle' formula was used against Edom; here it is applied to Babylon.
In Jeremiah 50:3, a nation from the north attacks Babylon — directly describing the fulfillment of the summons here.
In Jeremiah 6:1, the same trumpet-and-signal imagery warns Jerusalem, contrasting with the call against Babylon here.
In Isaiah 13:2-5, raising a banner and mustering nations against Babylon is the same judgment scene as here.
In Isaiah 41:25, God raises a northern conqueror (Cyrus) against Babylon — the same figure implied by the coalition summoned here.
In Isaiah 21:9, the fall of Babylon is announced — 'Fallen, fallen is Babylon' — confirming that the attack summoned here succeeds.
Isaiah 21:2 names Elam and Media besieging Babylon, similar to the coalition called up here.
Isaiah 13:17 specifies the Medes as Babylon’s destroyers, aligning with the kingdoms summoned here.
Isaiah 13:5 adds that the army comes from afar as God’s weapons to destroy, echoing the distant invasion here.
Isaiah 13:4 describes the noise of nations gathering for war against Babylon, matching the mustering here.
Isaiah 5:26 uses the same signal-raising to summon distant nations for judgment, paralleling the call here.
In Obadiah 1:1, a call rises to attack Edom — same muster-of-nations formula for judgment on a different enemy.
Isaiah 18:3 also speaks of lifting a banner and blowing a trumpet to summon nations — identical imagery.
Zechariah 14:2 describes a similar gathering of all nations for war against Jerusalem — both depict God using nations to judge a city.
In Ezekiel 7:14, the trumpet is blown but no one goes to battle — contrasting the effective muster here.
Amos 3:6 uses the same trumpet image as a warning of divine judgment — here the trumpet summons nations against Babylon.