Jeremiah 7:20

Therefore thus saith the Lord God; Behold, mine anger and my fury shall be poured out upon this place, upon man, and upon beast, and upon the trees of the field, and upon the fruit of the ground; and it shall burn, and shall not be quenched.

Cross-reference

Jeremiah 4:23-26 describes the land becoming desolate and waste — matching the poured-out wrath on the land here.

Jeremiah 9:10 laments the desolation of mountains and fields — a vivid picture of the judgment's effect on nature.

Jeremiah 9:11 declares Jerusalem a heap of ruins — the specific outcome of the wrath poured out on this place.

Jeremiah 12:4 shows the land parched and animals perished due to wickedness — same cause and effect as the wrath here.

Jeremiah 17:27 repeats the unquenchable fire threat for Sabbath-breaking, linking judgment to covenant disobedience.

Jeremiah 42:18 explicitly parallels the pouring out of anger and wrath on Jerusalem, applying it to future disobedience.

Jeremiah 44:6 states God's fierce anger was poured out, making towns desolate ruins — exactly the judgment described here.

Jeremiah 21:6 specifies plague striking both man and beast — the same targets as the wrath on 'man and beast' here.

Jeremiah 39:8 Prophetic fulfillment

Jeremiah 39:8 records the historical burning of Jerusalem's houses — the literal fulfillment of this prophecy of unquenchable fire.

In Jeremiah 6:8, the same warning of desolation precedes the full wrath poured out here — a prior call to repent.

Revelation 16:1 Related theme

Revelation 16:1 commands angels to pour out bowls of God's wrath on earth, directly mirroring the pouring out of anger in Jeremiah.

2 Kings 22:17 uses identical phrasing 'my wrath will be poured out and not be quenched' in Huldah's prophecy against Judah.

Daniel 9:11 Related theme

Daniel 9:11 confesses that the curses of the law were poured out on Israel for disobedience, linking to the judgment Jeremiah warned about.

Ezekiel 20:48 directly states that the unquenchable fire is kindled by the Lord, reinforcing the source of judgment in Jeremiah.

Ezekiel 20:47 uses the same imagery of unquenchable fire consuming trees, echoing God's judgment against the land.

Lamentations 4:11 Prophetic fulfillment

Lamentations 4:11 depicts the Lord pouring out his hot anger and kindling a fire that consumes Zion's foundations, fulfilling of the judgment warned.

Lamentations 2:3-5 describes God's anger burning like fire against Jacob, echoing the unquenchable wrath proclaimed in Jeremiah.

Ezekiel 7:8 Parallel

Ezekiel 7:8 uses the exact phrase 'pour out my wrath', reinforcing the same imagery of God's anger being unleashed.

Isaiah 34:10 uses 'not be quenched' for Edom's desolation, directly paralleling the unquenchable fire of judgment.

Ezekiel 36:18 directly parallels 'I poured out my wrath' — the same expression of divine anger poured out over sin.

2 Chronicles 34:25 repeats the same declaration of unquenched wrath from Huldah, mirroring Jeremiah's oracle.

2 Chronicles 12:7 contrasts by showing God withholding wrath when the people humble themselves, unlike Jer 7:20's unquenched wrath.

Ezekiel 15:6 uses the same image of Jerusalem given to fire as fuel for judgment — both depict divine wrath as consuming fire.