Revelation 18:10
Standing afar off for the fear of her torment, saying, Alas, alas, that great city Babylon, that mighty city! for in one hour is thy judgment come.
Cross-reference
Revelation 18:19 echoes the 'Alas, alas' and 'in a single hour' from 18:10, as mariners join the lament over Babylon.
Revelation 18:17 repeats 'in a single hour' from verse 10, linking the judgments on Babylon and its merchants.
Revelation 18:16 repeats the 'Alas, alas' lament from 18:10, now spoken by merchants mourning Babylon's lost wealth.
Revelation 18:8 describes the plagues that cause the torment lamented in verse 10 — immediate narrative connection.
Revelation 18:18 records the same 'Alas, alas' lament from merchants, echoing the kings' cry.
Revelation 14:8 also announces Babylon's fall with 'Fallen, fallen is Babylon the great,' directly linking to the lament here.
Revelation 19:2 declares God's judgment just, avenging His servants — the reason for Babylon's fall in 18:10.
Revelation 17:5 identifies the city as 'Babylon the Great, mother of harlots' — the subject of the lament.
Revelation 16:19 shows God's wrath on Babylon, giving her the cup — the same judgment lamented in 18:10.
In Revelation 14:7, the angel declares 'the hour of His judgment has come'—the same proclamation echoed in Babylon's fall here.
Isaiah 21:9 prophesies Babylon's fall with 'Fallen, fallen is Babylon,' which the lament in Revelation echoes.
Jeremiah 51:8 calls to wail for Babylon's sudden fall, directly paralleling the lament in Revelation.
Psalm 73:19 says the wicked are 'destroyed in a moment, swept away by terrors' — matching the sudden judgment and fear in Revelation 18:10.
In Nahum 3:7, spectators flee from Nineveh's ruin and ask who will bemoan her—directly paralleling the mourning here.
In Ezekiel 32:10, kings are horribly afraid and tremble at Egypt's fall—directly parallel to the terrified kings here.
Ezekiel 28:19 says all who know Tyre are appalled at its end — same theme of horrified onlookers as Rev 18:10.
Ezekiel 27:35 has inhabitants of isles appalled at Tyre's fall — directly parallels Rev 18:10's 'standing far off for fear'.
Ezekiel 26:17 laments Tyre as 'renowned city' destroyed — same lament structure as Rev 18:10's 'Alas, alas, great city'.
Jeremiah 51:41 laments 'How is Sheshach taken!' with 'praise of the whole earth' — mirrors Rev 18:10's lament over 'great city'.
Jeremiah 50:27 pronounces 'woe' on Babylon with 'their day has come' — directly parallels Rev 18:10's 'alas' and 'your judgment has come'.
Isaiah 47:11 warns Babylon of sudden ruin that cannot be warded off — directly echoed by Revelation's 'in one hour your judgment has come'.
Isaiah 13:6 calls Babylon to 'wail' for the near day of the LORD — the same sudden destruction echoed in Revelation 18:10's 'in one hour'.
In Zephaniah 2:15, Nineveh's pride leads to desolation and passersby hissing—echoing the fall of the proud city here.
In Daniel 4:30, Nebuchadnezzar boasts of his great Babylon—pride that precedes the fall echoed in this judgment.
In Ezekiel 32:9, the destruction of Egypt troubles many nations—mirroring the fear of the kings mourning Babylon here.
In Numbers 16:34, Israel flees from Korah's judgment, echoing the kings standing far off in fear at Babylon's fall in 18:10.