It's the same exact idea as the Leviticus 14:26-46: the curses with which he would curse them but also in the same chapter all the blessings that he would bless them with.
So if you wanted a single place for those two perspectives then Deuteronomy 28 would be a good read.
Good post.
Deut 28:67, 68 appears to be the fulfillment of
Luke 21:24 and
Reve 13:10 and the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 ad, imho.......
Deu 28:
67
“In the morning you shall say, ‘Oh, that it were evening!’ And at evening you shall say, ‘Oh, that it were morning!’ because of the fear which terrifies your heart, and because of the sight which your eyes see.
68 “
And the LORD will take you back to Egypt in ships, by the way of which I said to you, ‘You shall never see it again.' And there you shall be offered for sale to your enemies as male and female slaves, but no one will buy you.”
[Luke 21:24/Reve 13:10]
Luke 21:24
And they shall be falling to mouth of sword and they shall be being led captive into all the nations.
And Jerusalem shall be being trodden by nations until which may be being filled times of nations.
[Reve 11:2/13:10]
Reve 13:10
If any to-captivity into captivity is going away. If any in sword to be killed, is binding him in sword to be killed. Here is the endurance and the faith of the saints.
[Luke 21:24]
The Destruction of Jerusalem - George Peter Holford, 1805AD
........The day on which Titus encompassed Jerusalem, was the feast of the Passover ;................
Before their final demolition, however, Titus took, a. survey of the city and its fortifications....
Titus exclaimed: "
Had not God himself (exclaimed he) aided out operations, and driven the Jews from their fortresses, it would have been absolutely impossible to have taken them; for what could men, and the force of engines, have done against such towers as these?".............
Of the Jews destroyed during the siege, Josephus reckons not less than ONE MILLION AND ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND, .................
Of the captives the whole was about NINETY-SEVEN THOUSAND.
........the tallest and most beautiful youths, together with several of the Jewish nobles were reserved by Titus to grace his triumphal entry into Rome.
After this selection,
all above the age of seventeen were sent in chains into Egypt, to be employed there as slaves, or distributed throughout the empire to be sacrificed as gladiators in the amphitheatres ; whilst those who were under this age, were exposed to sale.
[Deut 28:68/Luke 21:24/Reve 13:10]
Deut 28:68
“And the LORD will take you back to Egypt in ships, by the way of which I said to you, ‘You shall never see it again.'
And there you shall be offered for sale to your enemies as male and female slaves, but no one will buy you.”
[Luke 21:24/Reve 13:10]