Amos 2:1
Thus saith the Lord; For three transgressions of Moab, and for four, I will not turn away the punishment thereof; because he burned the bones of the king of Edom into lime:
Cross-references
Amos 2:4 applies the same 'three transgressions... four' formula to Judah, continuing the judgment series.
Amos 2:6 uses the same structural formula for Israel’s judgment, extending the pattern of oracles.
Amos 1:3 begins the series with this formula against Damascus, providing the template for later judgments.
Isaiah 15:1 is a direct oracle against Moab, pronouncing its destruction — a specific judgment parallel to Amos 2:1.
Isaiah 16:14 gives a timed prophecy that Moab's glory will be brought low within three years — same judgment theme.
Isaiah 25:10 describes Moab trampled like straw — another image of Moab's downfall under God's judgment.
Jeremiah 48 is an extended oracle against Moab, detailing its destruction — a fuller parallel to Moab's condemnation in Amos.
Ezekiel 25:8 condemns Moab for mocking Judah — another reason for Moab's judgment, parallel to Amos's charge.
Ezekiel 25:9 continues the judgment against Moab by specifying cities that will fall — same theme of divine punishment.
Zephaniah 2:8 cites Moab's taunts against God's people as cause for judgment — parallels Amos's condemnation of Moab.
Zephaniah 2:9 declares Moab will become like Sodom — a severe judgment parallel to the fate in Amos 2:1.
In Jeremiah 25:21, Moab is named among nations to drink God's wrath — directly linking to the judgment here.
In Isaiah 16:6, Moab's pride is condemned — another oracle against Moab, complementing Amos' focus on cruelty.