Revelation 18:11
And the merchants of the earth shall weep and mourn over her; for no man buyeth their merchandise any more:
Cross-reference
Revelation 18:23 lists further judgment: no light or marriage, and merchants' corruption — consequences of Babylon's fall.
Revelation 18:20 calls heaven to rejoice over Babylon's fall — opposing the merchants' lament in 18:11.
Revelation 18:15 describes the same merchants standing far off in fear, adding detail to their mourning.
Revelation 18:9 shows kings lamenting Babylon's fall, parallel to merchants' grief in 18:11.
Revelation 18:3 explains how merchants grew rich from Babylon — the wealth they now lose in 18:11.
Revelation 18:17 continues the lament, emphasizing the sudden destruction of wealth that causes the merchants' mourning.
Revelation 18:16 voices the same lament over Babylon's fall, amplifying the merchants' grief with a direct woe.
Revelation 14:8 announces Babylon's fall—the same event that causes merchants to weep in Rev 18:11.
Isaiah 47:15 depicts Babylon's merchants as powerless to save — the same futility seen when they mourn over lost trade here.
Ezekiel 27:27-36 describes merchants mourning Tyre's fall — directly parallel to the weeping merchants here over Babylon.
Ezekiel 26:17-21 records a lament over Tyre's fall — echoing the merchants' lament for Babylon in this verse.
Isaiah 23:1-15 describes Tyre's fall and merchants mourning — a prophetic prototype for Babylon's commercial collapse here.
In Acts 19:25, silversmiths fear loss of income from idol trade—directly parallels merchants weeping over lost business in Rev 18:11.
In Ezekiel 26:12, Tyre's fall includes plundering of merchandise—the same reason merchants weep in Rev 18:11. The commercial city's destruction is a parallel.
Jeremiah 51:13 declares Babylon's end due to its riches — here merchants mourn the loss of trade as that end comes.
1 John 2:16 lists worldly lusts (lust of eyes, pride of life)—the same desires that drive the merchants' grief in Rev 18:11.
Zephaniah 1:11 prophesies merchants being wiped out — a similar judgment theme to the merchants' mourning here.