Revelation 18:15
The merchants of these things, which were made rich by her, shall stand afar off for the fear of her torment, weeping and wailing,
Cross-reference
Revelation 18:3 introduces the merchants who grew rich from Babylon's luxuries—here they mourn her fall.
Revelation 18:11 has merchants weeping because trade stops—here they weep from fear of torment; same group, different reasons.
Revelation 18:19 shows shipmasters lamenting Babylon's fall with dust on heads, mirroring the merchants' grief here.
Ezekiel 27:31 uses the same imagery of merchants making themselves bald and weeping bitterly for fallen Tyre — a clear parallel to Babylon's merchants.
Isaiah 47:15 describes Babylon's merchants who labored with her but cannot save — closely matching the merchants' helpless grief in Rev 18.
Ezekiel 26:16 pictures maritime princes trembling and astonished over Tyre's fall — a direct parallel to the merchants' reaction to Babylon's judgment.
Amos 5:17 adds wailing in vineyards — reinforcing the widespread mourning motif that parallels the merchants' grief in Rev 18.
Ezekiel 28:19 says all who knew Tyre are astonished at her terror — a general parallel to the amazement over Babylon's fall.