2 Kings 13:7
Neither did he leave of the people to Jehoahaz but fifty horsemen, and ten chariots, and ten thousand footmen; for the king of Syria had destroyed them, and had made them like the dust by threshing.
Cross-reference
2 Kings 13:5 records God sending a deliverer to save Israel from Aram—contrasts the destruction here.
2 Kings 8:12 predicts Hazael's atrocities; the destruction of Jehoahaz's army fulfills that prophecy.
2 Kings 10:32 states Hazael defeated Israel; this verse gives the specific result — only fifty horsemen and ten chariots left.
2 Kings 17:20 describes God's rejection of Israel leading to exile—extends the judgment seen here to its final outcome.
Isaiah 41:15 is the opposite: Israel becomes a threshing sledge that crushes others, whereas here Aram crushes Israel like dust.
Deuteronomy 28:62 warns that disobedience reduces Israel to few—this verse shows that curse in effect.
Psalm 107:39 speaks of numbers decreasing under oppression—mirrors the reduction of Jehoahaz's army.
Amos 4:10 recounts God's judgment killing young men and horses, paralleling the destruction of Jehoahaz's cavalry and foot soldiers.
Proverbs 14:28 says many subjects bring a king glory—Jehoahaz's reduced army illustrates the ruin of a prince.
Amos 1:3 uses threshing imagery to condemn Damascus for crushing Gilead—parallels Aram's oppression of Israel here.