Jeremiah 8:13
I will surely consume them, saith the Lord: there shall be no grapes on the vine, nor figs on the fig tree, and the leaf shall fade; and the things that I have given them shall pass away from them.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 17:8 describes a tree with unfailing fruit and green leaves — the opposite of the withered, fruitless vine here.
Hosea 2:9 threatens to take back grain, wine, wool—an almost identical promise to remove His gifts as in Jeremiah.
Luke 13:6-9 tells of a fig tree given another year to bear fruit — contrasting the immediate judgment here with patient mercy.
In Matthew 21:19, Jesus curses a fig tree with no fruit — a vivid enactment of the same judgment on fruitlessness seen here.
In Haggai 1:11, God calls a drought on crops — the same kind of agricultural judgment as the removal of fruit here.
Habakkuk 3:17 uses the same image of no figs or grapes but expresses faith in God despite that—contrasts the judgment in Jeremiah.
Joel 1:10-12 expands on vine dried up, fig tree languishing, harvest perished—identical judgment theme.
Joel 1:7 describes locusts destroying vine and fig tree—the very same image of fruitlessness from judgment.
Leviticus 26:20 promises land not yielding increase as a covenant curse for disobedience—directly parallels the removed grapes and figs.
Hosea 2:8 shows God gave grain, wine, oil but Israel used them for Baal—the same gifts Jeremiah 8:13 says God will take away.
Isaiah 5:4-6's vineyard yields wild grapes so God removes its protection—echoes the theme of failed fruit and divine judgment.
Psalm 1:3 portrays the righteous as a tree that never withers and yields fruit — directly opposite to the fading, fruitless tree in judgment.
Deuteronomy 28:39-42 lists curses of failed vineyards and olives—the same covenant curses causing the fruitlessness in Jeremiah.
Isaiah 32:10 warns of a failed vintage — the same curse on vineyards and harvests that appears in the judgment against Judah.
Isaiah 5:10 describes a drastically reduced harvest—quantifies the same crop failure as judgment for sin.
Malachi 3:11 promises protection from crop devourers for the faithful, contrasting the total harvest removal here as judgment.
Haggai 2:17 mentions blight and mildew as further instances of God striking the land's produce, echoing the curse on vines and figs.