Isaiah 5:5 Cross References
Isaiah 5:5
5: Now this is what I am going to do to my vineyard: I will tear down its fences and let it be destroyed. I will break down its walls and let the animals trample it.
Lamentations 1:15
- "The Lord has treated my mighty men with contempt. At his command a great army has come to crush my young warriors. The Lord has trampled his beloved city as grapes are trampled in a winepress.
Isaiah 28:18
- I will cancel the bargain you made to avoid death, and I will overturn your deal to dodge the grave. When the terrible enemy floods in, you will be trampled into the ground.
Luke 21:24
- They will be brutally killed by the sword or sent away as captives to all the nations of the world. And Jerusalem will be conquered and trampled down by the Gentiles until the age of the Gentiles comes to an end.
Isaiah 28:3
- The proud city of Samaria--the pride and joy of the drunkards of Israel--will be trampled beneath its enemies' feet.
Deuteronomy 28:49
- "The LORD will bring a distant nation against you from the end of the earth, and it will swoop down on you like an eagle. It is a nation whose language you do not understand,
- a fierce and heartless nation that shows no respect for the old and no pity for the young.
- Its armies will devour your livestock and crops, and you will starve to death. They will leave you no grain, new wine, olive oil, calves, or lambs, bringing about your destruction.
- They will lay siege to your cities until all the fortified walls in your land--the walls you trusted to protect you--are knocked down. They will attack all the towns in the land the LORD your God has given you.
Revelation 11:2
- But do not measure the outer courtyard, for it has been turned over to the nations. They will trample the holy city for 42 months.
Isaiah 10:6
- Assyria will enslave my people, who are a godless nation. It will plunder them, trampling them like dirt beneath its feet.
Isaiah 27:10
- Israel's fortified cities will be silent and empty, the houses abandoned, the streets covered with grass. Cattle will graze there, chewing on twigs and branches.
- The people are like the dead branches of a tree, broken off and used for kindling beneath the cooking pots. Israel is a foolish and stupid nation, for its people have turned away from God. Therefore, the one who made them will show them no pity or mercy.
Isaiah 25:10
- For the LORD's good hand will rest on Jerusalem. Moab will be crushed like trampled straw and left to rot.
Leviticus 26:31
- I will make your cities desolate and destroy your places of worship, and I will take no pleasure in your offerings of incense.
- Yes, I myself will devastate your land. Your enemies who come to occupy it will be utterly shocked at the destruction they see.
- I will scatter you among the nations and attack you with my own weapons. Your land will become desolate, and your cities will lie in ruins.
- Then at last the land will make up for its missed Sabbath years as it lies desolate during your years of exile in the land of your enemies. Then the land will finally rest and enjoy its Sabbaths.
- As the land lies in ruins, it will take the rest you never allowed it to take every seventh year while you lived in it.
2 Chronicles 36:4
- The king of Egypt appointed Eliakim, the brother of Jehoahaz, as the next king of Judah and Jerusalem, and he changed Eliakim's name to Jehoiakim. Then Neco took Jehoahaz to Egypt as a prisoner.
- Jehoiakim was twenty-five years old when he became king, and he reigned in Jerusalem eleven years. But he did what was evil in the sight of the LORD his God.
- Then King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon came to Jerusalem and captured it, and he bound Jehoiakim in chains and led him away to Babylon.
- Nebuchadnezzar also took some of the treasures from the Temple of the LORD, and he placed them in his palace in Babylon.
- The rest of the events of Jehoiakim's reign, including all the evil things he did and everything found against him, are recorded in The Book of the Kings of Israel and Judah. Then his son Jehoiachin became the next king.
Nehemiah 2:3
- but I replied, "Long live the king! Why shouldn't I be sad? For the city where my ancestors are buried is in ruins, and the gates have been burned down."
Genesis 11:4
- Let's build a great city with a tower that reaches to the skies--a monument to our greatness! This will bring us together and keep us from scattering all over the world."
Lamentations 4:12
- Not a king in all the earth--no one in all the world--would have believed an enemy could march through the gates of Jerusalem.
Genesis 11:7
- Come, let's go down and give them different languages. Then they won't be able to understand each other."
Psalms 74:1
- O God, why have you rejected us forever? Why is your anger so intense against the sheep of your own pasture?
- Remember that we are the people you chose in ancient times, the tribe you redeemed as your own special possession! And remember Jerusalem, your home here on earth.
- Walk through the awful ruins of the city; see how the enemy has destroyed your sanctuary.
- There your enemies shouted their victorious battle cries; there they set up their battle standards.
- They chopped down the entrance like woodcutters in a forest.
Psalms 80:12
- But now, why have you broken down our walls so that all who pass may steal our fruit?
- The boar from the forest devours us, and the wild animals feed on us.
- Come back, we beg you, O God Almighty. Look down from heaven and see our plight. Watch over and care for this vine
- that you yourself have planted, this son you have raised for yourself.
- For we are chopped up and burned by our enemies. May they perish at the sight of your frown.
Daniel 8:13
- Then I heard two of the holy ones talking to each other. One of them said, "How long will the events of this vision last? How long will the rebellion that causes desecration stop the daily sacrifices? How long will the Temple and heaven's armies be trampled on?"
Lamentations 1:2
- She sobs through the night; tears stream down her cheeks. Among all her lovers, there is no one left to help her. All her friends have betrayed her; they are now her enemies.
- Judah has been led away into captivity, afflicted and enslaved. She lives among foreign nations and has no place of rest. Her enemies have chased her down, and she has nowhere to turn.
- The roads to Jerusalem are in mourning, no longer filled with crowds on their way to celebrate the Temple festivals. The city gates are silent, her priests groan, her young women are crying--how bitterly Jerusalem weeps!
- Her oppressors have become her masters, and her enemies prosper, for the LORD has punished Jerusalem for her many sins. Her children have been captured and taken away to distant lands.
- All the beauty and majesty of Jerusalem are gone. Her princes are like starving deer searching for pasture, too weak to run from the pursuing enemy.