Revelation 14:7
Saying with a loud voice, Fear God, and give glory to him; for the hour of his judgment is come: and worship him that made heaven, and earth, and the sea, and the fountains of waters.
Cross-reference
Revelation 18:19 laments Babylon's fall 'in one hour,' confirming the judgment hour announced here and showing its fulfillment.
In Revelation 4:9, the living creatures give glory to God on the throne, mirroring the call to give glory here.
Revelation 4:11 gives the same reason for worship—because God created all things—directly supporting the call to worship the Creator here.
Revelation 11:18 announces that God's wrath and judgment have come, and mentions those who fear His name — a direct parallel.
In Revelation 16:9, the unrepentant curse God and do not give him glory — a stark contrast to the call here to give glory before judgment.
Revelation 15:4 asks who will not fear and glorify God because His judgments are revealed — an echo of the same call.
Revelation 22:9 also directs worship to God alone, echoing the exclusive worship demanded here.
Revelation 19:10 emphasizes worshiping God alone, reinforcing the command here to worship the Creator.
In Revelation 18:10, Babylon's sudden judgment is mourned — connected to the announcement of judgment here.
In Revelation 19:5, a voice calls those who fear God to praise Him — sharing the theme of reverent worship.
Ecclesiastes 12:13 sums up duty as fearing God and keeping commandments — closely parallels the call to fear and worship.
Acts 14:15 uses almost identical language — the living God who made heaven, earth, and sea — directly paralleling the worship appeal.
1 Peter 4:7 declares 'the end of all things is at hand,' closely echoing the nearness of judgment here and urging a similar response.
In Isaiah 44:23, all creation rejoices in the Lord's redemption — parallel to the angel's call here to worship the Creator of heaven and earth.
Psalm 146:6 explicitly states God made heaven, earth, and sea — directly matching the Creator worship call.
Psalm 89:7 declares that God is greatly to be feared in the assembly — a direct parallel to fearing God.
Exodus 20:11 provides the Sabbath commandment's creation formula (heaven, earth, sea) that is echoed here as the basis for worship.
Psalm 96:7 directly calls to ascribe glory to the Lord, exactly matching Revelation's command to give glory.
Psalm 33:8 calls all the earth to fear the Lord, directly paralleling Revelation's command to fear God before judgment.
Romans 1:21 describes failing to honor God as God—the opposite of the command here to give him glory. A clear contrast.
Luke 12:5 teaches to fear God who can cast into hell, directly reinforcing Revelation's call to fear God before judgment.
In Joshua 7:19, Joshua uses the same phrase 'give glory to the Lord' in calling Achan to confess, paralleling the call here.
John 5:28-29 describes the hour when the dead are raised for judgment, expanding the scope of the judgment hour announced here.
Matthew 25:13 warns the hour is unknown, in contrast to this verse which proclaims the hour has come.
In Malachi 2:2, failing to honor God brings a curse — connected to the call here to give glory to avoid judgment.
Psalm 76:7 declares God's fearsome wrath, echoing the fear and judgment context of Revelation 14:7.
In 1 Samuel 6:5, the Philistines are told to give glory to God to lift his hand — similar acknowledgment of God's power.
In Luke 17:18, the healed leper returns to give glory to God, exemplifying the response called for here.
Daniel 8:19 speaks of the 'time appointed' for the end, paralleling the divinely set hour of judgment announced here.
Ezekiel 7:6 repeats 'The end is come' with emphasis, reinforcing the certainty of the judgment hour proclaimed here.
Ezekiel 7:2 declares 'An end is come' to Israel, echoing the same urgent announcement of judgment's arrival found here.
In Isaiah 42:12, the call to give glory to the Lord and declare his praise echoes the same imperative here.
In Ecclesiastes 12:14, the same theme of divine judgment appears: God will judge every deed, echoing the judgment call here.
Psalm 36:1 says the wicked have no fear of God — contrasting the call to fear Him in Revelation 14:7.
Nehemiah 9:6 praises God as creator of heaven, earth, and sea, similarly linking creation to worship and reinforcing the call here.
1 Chronicles 16:26 declares the Lord made the heavens, echoing Revelation's call to worship the Creator over idols.