Amos 5:1

Hear ye this word which I take up against you, even a lamentation, O house of Israel.

Cross-reference

Amos 3:1 Parallel

Amos 3:1 uses the same 'Hear this word' formula but as a judgment oracle rather than a lament.

Amos 4:1 Parallel

Amos 4:1 also begins with 'Hear this word', but addresses the wealthy women of Samaria, not all Israel.

Ezekiel 19:1 uses the identical command to 'take up a lamentation' for Israel's princes.

Ezekiel 27:2 also begins 'raise a lamentation' — echoing Amos's same prophetic lament form over a doomed nation.

Ezekiel 27:27-32 describes the wailing and mourning of Tyre's fall — a detailed lament parallel to Amos's call for Israel.

Ezekiel 28:12 repeats the exact phrase 'raise a lamentation' — this time over Tyre's king, mirroring Amos's lament formula.

Ezekiel 32:2 commands 'raise a lamentation over Pharaoh' — using the same lament genre as Amos's prophecy against Israel.

Ezekiel 32:16 calls this a 'lamentation that shall be chanted' — the same tragic dirge form Amos employs for fallen Israel.

Micah 2:4 Parallel

Micah 2:4 speaks of taking up a 'taunt song' and lamenting — directly echoing Amos's lament over Israel's judgment.

Jeremiah 7:29 calls for a lament over God's rejection, matching the lament tone of Amos 5:1.

Jeremiah 9:10 uses similar language of taking up a lamentation for the desolated land.

Ezekiel 19:14 concludes a lament by labeling it 'a lamentation', matching Amos 5:1's genre.

Ezekiel 26:17 raises a lament over Tyre's fall, thematically similar to Amos's lament over Israel.