Revelation 20:11
And I saw a great white throne, and him that sat on it, from whose face the earth and the heaven fled away; and there was found no place for them.
Cross-reference
Revelation 20:2 shows Satan bound earlier, leading to his final judgment on the great white throne in 20:11.
Revelation 20:12 continues the scene: the dead stand before the same throne for judgment, the immediate sequel.
In Revelation 21:1, the first heaven and earth pass away and a new creation appears — this is the result of the fleeing here.
In Revelation 6:14, the heavens recede like a scroll and mountains are moved — the same cosmic fleeing seen here at the great white throne.
Revelation 19:11 depicts Christ as the righteous judge on a white horse, anticipating the great white throne judgment in 20:11.
In Revelation 16:20, islands and mountains flee away — a parallel image of creation dissolving before God's judgment.
Revelation 21:5 shows the same throne figure declaring new creation, following the judgment scene.
In Revelation 4:2, John sees a throne in heaven — the same divine throne that appears in Revelation 20:11 for judgment.
In Revelation 6:16, people hide from the face of the throne — anticipating the fleeing of heaven and earth from God's presence.
In Revelation 12:8, Satan's angels are cast out and 'no place was found' for them in heaven — a pattern of removal repeated here for the old creation.
Psalm 97:2 similarly says righteousness and justice are the foundation of his throne, with clouds and darkness around him.
Psalm 89:14 states righteousness and justice are the foundation of God's throne — reinforcing the basis of the judgment here.
In 2 Peter 3:10-12, the heavens pass away, elements melt, earth burned — detailed parallel of the cosmic dissolution here.
In 2 Peter 3:7, the present heavens and earth are reserved for fire on judgment day — the same event depicted here.
Genesis 18:25 calls God the Judge of all the earth, echoing the divine judgment scene on the great white throne in 20:11.
Matthew 25:31 depicts the Son of Man sitting on his glorious throne for judgment — a parallel to this throne scene.
In Daniel 2:35, the kingdoms are crushed like chaff and 'no place was found for them' — the exact phrase used here for the fleeing earth and heavens.
In Matthew 24:35, Jesus predicts heaven and earth will pass away — here that prophecy is fulfilled as they flee from the throne.
Romans 2:5 warns of storing up wrath for the day of God's righteous judgment — the same day depicted here.
Acts 17:31 explicitly says God has fixed a day to judge the world by Jesus — a direct reference to the judgment throne.
Luke 9:26 mentions the Son of Man coming in his glory — the same glorious judgment scene where he will be ashamed of the unfaithful.
Matthew 26:64 declares the Son of Man seated at God's right hand and coming in glory — directly linked to this judgment throne scene.
Luke 16:17 says heaven and earth will disappear — directly parallel to the fleeing of earth and sky before the throne in this verse.
Luke 21:33 repeats that heaven and earth will pass away — underscoring the permanence of God's word amid the temporal dissolution seen here.
In John 5:22, the Father gives all judgment to the Son, identifying the one on the great white throne as Christ.
Acts 10:42 declares Jesus as the appointed judge of all, the same judge who sits on the great white throne.
Romans 2:16 describes the day God judges secrets through Jesus, matching the judgment at the great white throne.
Romans 14:10 says all will stand before God's judgment seat, directly corresponding to the great white throne.
2 Corinthians 5:10 describes appearing before Christ's judgment seat, identical to the judgment at the great white throne.
In 2 Thessalonians 1:9, eternal destruction away from God's presence echoes the fleeing of heaven and earth from the throne — both emphasize separation.
In 2 Timothy 4:1, Christ is described as judge of the living and dead, directly relating to the great white throne judgment.
In Hebrews 4:13, all creatures are exposed before God to give account — the same reality as the great white throne judgment.
In Hebrews 9:27, judgment after death is appointed — this is enacted at the great white throne judgment.
Isaiah 64:1 depicts a similar theophany where God's coming causes mountains to tremble, matching the cosmic flight before the throne here.
Job 26:11 says the pillars of heaven tremble at God's rebuke — directly paralleling the heavens fleeing at his presence here.
Psalm 50:6 declares God himself is judge—directly linking to the great white throne judgment scene here.
Psalm 102:26 says heavens and earth will perish like a garment—strongly paralleling their fleeing from God's presence here.
Psalm 104:5 says the earth is set on foundations never to be moved—contrasting with its fleeing from God's presence here.
Isaiah 2:19 describes people hiding from God’s majesty when he shakes the earth — similar to earth and heaven fleeing here.
Isaiah 13:13 says heavens tremble and earth shakes at God’s wrath — a parallel cosmic upheaval to the fleeing earth and heaven here.
Isaiah 34:4 depicts the heavens rolled up like a scroll — a similar cosmic dissolution to the fleeing heaven here.
Isaiah 51:6 says heavens vanish like smoke and earth wears out — a direct parallel to the fleeing earth and heaven here.
Jeremiah 10:10 describes the earth quaking at God's wrath, reinforcing the terror of His presence causing heaven and earth to flee.
Ezekiel 1:26 provides the OT vision of God's throne (sapphire, human-like), which the great white throne here echoes.
Micah 1:4 shows mountains melting like wax at God's coming, echoing the fleeing of creation here.
Mark 13:31 echoes the same cosmic dissolution — heaven and earth passing away — reinforcing the finality of God's throne judgment.
Habakkuk 3:10 describes mountains writhing at God's appearance, similar to the earth and heaven fleeing in this judgment scene.
Nahum 1:5 depicts mountains quaking and earth heaving at God's presence, directly paralleling the cosmic upheaval here.
Daniel 7:10 shows the heavenly court with books opened and fiery stream, directly paralleling the judgment scene with the throne.
Amos 9:5 describes the earth melting at God's touch, mirroring the dissolution of earth and heaven before the throne.
Joel 2:10 portrays cosmic shaking (sun/moon darkened, stars withdraw) similar to the earth and heaven fleeing here.
Daniel 7:26 describes the court sitting in judgment to destroy dominion, paralleling the final judgment at the great white throne.
Mark 14:62 depicts the Son of Man seated at God's right hand — the same throne authority that judges all in Revelation 20:11.
Psalm 18:9 shows God bowing the heavens to come down — opposite movement to the heavens fleeing away here.
Psalm 9:8 describes God judging the world with equity — directly echoing the righteous judgment scene here.
Isaiah 24:19 describes earth broken and shaken in judgment — similar to the earth fleeing here.
Acts 24:25 mentions the judgment to come, which is the very judgment scene depicted at the great white throne.
Ecclesiastes 12:14 states God will judge every deed — reinforcing the judgment scene here before the great white throne.
Psalm 104:32 says the earth trembles at God's look—paralleling the earth fleeing from His presence here.
In Hebrews 1:11, creation perishes while God remains — paralleling the fleeing of heaven and earth before the eternal throne.
Matthew 5:18 mentions heaven and earth passing away — parallel to their fleeing here, though the focus is on the Law's permanence until that time.