Psalm 75:8
For in the hand of the Lord there is a cup, and the wine is red; it is full of mixture; and he poureth out of the same: but the dregs thereof, all the wicked of the earth shall wring them out, and drink them.
Cross-reference
Psalm 60:3 also uses wine that makes stagger as a metaphor for divine judgment, closely matching the cup imagery.
Revelation 16:19 explicitly says Babylon drains the cup of God's fury, a direct echo of the wicked draining the dregs in Psalm 75:8.
Job 21:20 explicitly mentions drinking the cup of the Almighty's wrath, identical imagery to Psalm 75:8.
Revelation 14:10 continues the cup of wrath imagery, adding torment — the same judgment cup from Psalm 75:8 is poured full strength.
Jeremiah 25:28 uses the same cup of God's wrath imagery — nations must drink it, echoing the forced judgment in Psalm 75:8.
Jeremiah 25:27 commands drinking the cup to get drunk and fall, reinforcing the judgment cup theme.
Jeremiah 25:17 narrates the fulfillment of taking and giving the cup of wrath, directly continuing the imagery.
Jeremiah 25:15 explicitly commands taking the cup of God's wrath to make nations drink, same metaphor.
Isaiah 51:22 refers to the cup of wrath that made stagger, now removed, paralleling the same cup imagery.
Isaiah 51:17 describes drinking the cup of the LORD's wrath to its dregs, directly echoing Psalm 75:8.
Isaiah 63:6 describes God making peoples drunk in His wrath and pouring out blood — a strong parallel to the cup of wrath in Psalm 75:8.
Jeremiah 48:26 uses the same cup-of-wrath imagery against Moab — they will be made drunk and wallow in vomit.
Ezekiel 23:34 echoes the draining of the cup — Jerusalem must drink and gnaw its shards, a vivid parallel to the wicked draining the dregs.
Obadiah 1:16 directly parallels the cup: nations drink continually on God's holy mountain, just as the wicked drain the cup in Psalm 75.
Nahum 3:11 says Nineveh will be drunk and hidden — same metaphor of drunkenness as divine judgment.
Habakkuk 2:16 explicitly mentions 'the cup of the LORD's right hand' — a direct reference to the same cup of wrath.
Zechariah 12:2 calls Jerusalem a 'cup of staggering' for surrounding peoples — same cup metaphor for judgment.
Mark 10:38 uses the cup metaphor for Jesus' suffering — a NT fulfillment of the OT cup of wrath that Christ drinks.
John 18:11 has Jesus accepting the cup from the Father — directly echoing the cup of suffering and judgment.
Revelation 15:7 echoes the cup of God's wrath imagery — seven bowls of wrath given to angels, paralleling the cup the wicked drink in Psalm 75:8.
Jeremiah 13:13 applies the same drunkenness judgment to Jerusalem's leaders — they will be filled with wine of God's wrath.
Jeremiah 9:15 gives wormwood and poisoned water as judgment — a different drink metaphor but similar theme of divine retribution through a cup.