Luke 21:6
As for these things which ye behold, the days will come, in the which there shall not be left one stone upon another, that shall not be thrown down.
Cross-reference
Luke 19:44-48 gives the same 'not one stone' prophecy and temple cleansing — directly parallel to the destruction Jesus predicts in Luke 21:6.
Luke 13:35 foretells Jerusalem's desolation, a complementary prophecy to the temple's destruction here.
1 Kings 9:7 warns the temple will be cast out if Israel is unfaithful — the same covenant judgment Jesus pronounces in Luke 21:6.
In Acts 6:14, the accusation continues, citing Jesus' claim to destroy the temple—directly referencing this prophecy.
Mark 13:2 has the same saying of Jesus about not one stone left—another gospel parallel.
Matthew 24:2 records the identical prophecy from Jesus—a synoptic parallel to this verse.
Micah 3:12 prophesies Jerusalem becoming a heap of ruins and the temple mount a wooded height—the fate Jesus announces.
Daniel 9:27 describes the desolator making the temple desolate—fulfilled in the destruction Jesus predicts.
Daniel 9:26 prophesies the destruction of the city and sanctuary by a prince—the same event Jesus foretells here.
In Ezekiel 7:20-22, the temple's treasures are profaned by foreigners as divine judgment—parallel to Jesus' prediction of total destruction.
Lamentations 2:6-8 describes the Lord's destruction of the temple and walls — the same calamity Jesus foretells for the temple.
Jeremiah 26:18 cites Micah's prophecy that Jerusalem will become a heap of rubble — the same total destruction Jesus speaks of.
Jeremiah 26:9 records people questioning Jeremiah's prophecy that the temple will become like Shiloh — the same desolation Jesus predicts.
Jeremiah 26:6 threatens to make the temple like Shiloh — a pile of ruins — the very fate Jesus describes here.
Jeremiah 7:11-14 warns that God will destroy the temple because of their sins, just as He did to Shiloh — the same judgment Jesus announces.
Isaiah 64:11 laments the temple burned and in ruins — the very destruction Jesus predicts, with not one stone left on another.
Isaiah 64:10 describes Jerusalem and the temple as a desolate wilderness — the same fate Jesus prophesies for the temple.
2 Chronicles 7:20-22 warns that the temple will become a heap of rubble if Israel forsakes God — the same judgment Jesus announces here.
Daniel 8:11 describes the sanctuary thrown down by a little horn — a prophetic type of the desecration and destruction Jesus predicts.
Matthew 24:1 records the same moment: the disciples showing Jesus the temple buildings, which leads to His prophecy of destruction.
2 Chronicles 36:19 also recounts the burning of the temple by Babylon, reinforcing the pattern of judgment that Jesus applies to the second temple.
2 Kings 25:9 records the Babylonian destruction of the first temple, a historical type of the future destruction Jesus predicts here.
Leviticus 26:31 is the covenant curse of sanctuary destruction that Jesus' prophecy echoes — God warns of laying waste sanctuaries for disobedience.
Lamentations 4:1 mourns the sacred gems scattered in the streets — a picture of the temple's total ruin and desecration Jesus predicts.
Zechariah 14:2 describes a siege of Jerusalem with houses plundered—parallel to the city's destruction Jesus predicts, but not specifically the temple.