Jeremiah 6:4
Prepare ye war against her; arise, and let us go up at noon. Woe unto us! for the day goeth away, for the shadows of the evening are stretched out.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 15:8 mentions a 'spoiler at noonday' — echoing the noon attack in 6:4, reinforcing the suddenness of judgment.
Jeremiah 51:27 uses the same 'prepare war' language but against Babylon — a mirror call for judgment on the oppressor.
Jeremiah 5:10 also commands attack on Jerusalem but with a limit — 'do not make a full end' — adding nuance of partial judgment.
Jeremiah 8:20 laments 'harvest past, summer ended,' deepening the theme of missed opportunity and urgency.
Jeremiah 51:28 continues the call to prepare nations against Babylon — shares the phrase 'prepare against her', but target is reversed.
Isaiah 5:26-30 describes God summoning a distant nation to swoop like a lion — same divine judgment theme, with vivid imagery of the invaders.
Isaiah 13:2-5 calls to raise a banner and prepare war — same language, but against Babylon rather than Jerusalem.
Joel 3:9 repeats 'Prepare war' verbatim, but summons nations against God's enemies in the valley — a different target and eschatological setting.
Zephaniah 2:4 uses 'at noon' for sudden judgment on Philistine cities, echoing the same timing of catastrophe.