Jeremiah 51:29

And the land shall tremble and sorrow: for every purpose of the Lord shall be performed against Babylon, to make the land of Babylon a desolation without an inhabitant.

Cross-reference

Jeremiah 51:43 repeats the same desolation — cities become a dry land with no inhabitants, reinforcing the judgment.

In Jeremiah 51:12, the Lord has planned and done what he spoke — same decree behind the trembling here.

In Jeremiah 51:11, the Lord's purpose to destroy Babylon is revealed — same divine plan causing the trembling here.

In Jeremiah 51:37, Babylon is described as a heap of ruins without inhabitant — almost identical phrasing reinforcing the same prophecy.

Jeremiah 50:45 reveals the LORD's plan and purposes against Babylon, directly echoing 'purposes against Babylon' in this verse.

In Jeremiah 10:10, the earth quakes at God's wrath — same trembling imagery as here for Babylon's judgment.

Jeremiah 50:13 says Babylon will be wholly desolate and appalling to passersby, matching the 'desolation without inhabitant' here.

Jeremiah 50:39 adds wild beasts and ostriches dwelling in Babylon, emphasizing permanent uninhabitation.

Jeremiah 50:40 compares Babylon's fate to Sodom and Gomorrah, reinforcing total destruction.

In Jeremiah 25:28, the cup of God's wrath must be drunk by all nations, including Babylon — showing the inevitability of the judgment here.

In Jeremiah 50:43, the king's anguish mirrors the land's trembling — both show fear at God's judgment.

Jeremiah 8:16 describes the land trembling at enemy horses' snorting — the same 'trembling' language for invasion, but of Judah, not Babylon.

In Jeremiah 46:19, Egypt is told it will become a desolation without inhabitant — the same language used for Babylon here, showing a pattern of divine judgment.

In Revelation 18:21-24, Babylon is thrown down violently, never to be found — a vivid fulfillment of the desolation prophesied here.

In Isaiah 13:13, the heavens tremble and earth is shaken at God's wrath — directly parallel to the trembling land here.

In Revelation 18:2, Babylon's fall is proclaimed again as a dwelling for demons — a NT typological fulfillment of God's judgment on Babylon.

In Isaiah 47:1-15, Babylon's fall is described in detail — humiliation, desolation, loss of children — directly paralleling the desolation declared here.

In Isaiah 46:11, God says He has purposed and will do it, specifically raising Cyrus against Babylon — reinforcing that God's plan for Babylon's fall is unstoppable.

In Isaiah 46:10, God declares His counsel shall stand and He will accomplish all His purpose — directly echoing the Lord's purposes against Babylon that stand here.

Isaiah 14:23 says God will make Babylon a possession of hedgehogs and sweep it with destruction, echoing the desolation.

In Isaiah 14:16, the king who made the earth tremble is mocked — same image reversed in judgment here.

Isaiah 13:20 declares Babylon will never be inhabited, matching the 'without inhabitant' here.

Isaiah 13:19 similarly prophesies Babylon's fall like Sodom and Gomorrah, a parallel judgment.

Isaiah 47:9 Parallel

In Isaiah 47:9, Babylon is warned of sudden loss of children and widowhood — a specific judgment that aligns with the desolation declared here.