2 Kings 7:7
Wherefore they arose and fled in the twilight, and left their tents, and their horses, and their asses, even the camp as it was, and fled for their life.
Cross-reference
In 2 Kings 7:10, the lepers report the empty camp, confirming the flight described in verse 7.
Amos 2:14-16 describes warriors unable to save themselves by swiftness or strength – exactly what happened to the Syrian army here.
Psalm 33:17 declares that horses cannot save – here the Syrians abandoned their horses, proving the point.
Psalm 48:4-6 describes kings assembling, seeing, and fleeing in terror — directly parallels the Syrians' sudden panic and flight.
Psalm 68:12 says 'Kings and armies flee in haste' — a direct parallel to the Syrian army fleeing their camp.
Proverbs 28:1 says the wicked flee when no one pursues — exactly what the Syrians did, fleeing from only a sound.
In Judges 7:21, the Midianite army flees in panic as God routed them, directly mirroring the Aramean flight.
In 1 Samuel 14:15, a panic from God struck the Philistines, causing trembling; analogous to the terror that made the Arameans flee.
In 1 Kings 20:20, Arameans flee from Israel after defeat—a direct parallel to this panic and abandonment.
In 2 Chronicles 14:14, God strikes the Ethiopian army with terror, causing flight; same divine terror here.
Jeremiah 46:5 depicts fleeing soldiers in panic, leaving everything behind — directly parallels the Syrian abandonment of their camp.
In Deuteronomy 2:25, God promises to send dread of Israel on enemies; here the Arameans flee in terror, fulfilling that pattern.
Job 18:11 describes terrors that frighten the wicked on every side — similar to the Syrians fleeing from imagined armies.
Jeremiah 49:5 announces God‑sent panic causing flight — echoes the sudden terror that made the Syrian army flee.
In 1 Samuel 17:53, Israelites plunder the Philistine camp after victory; here abandoned camp leads to plunder.
In Judges 7:14, an enemy interprets a dream as God delivering them to Gideon, showing divinely-caused terror similar to the panic here.
In Psalm 48:5, kings see Zion and flee in terror, paralleling the sudden panic that made the Arameans flee.