Amos 7:2
And it came to pass, that when they had made an end of eating the grass of the land, then I said, O Lord God, forgive, I beseech thee: by whom shall Jacob arise? for he is small.
Cross-reference
Amos 7:5 repeats the exact plea 'How can Jacob survive?' after the fire vision, showing the same intercessory pattern.
Amos 4:9 describes a locust judgment Israel endured without repenting, contrasting with the intercession here.
Exodus 32:11 shows Moses interceding after the golden calf, pleading for God to relent — parallel to Amos's plea for forgiveness.
In Daniel 9:19, Daniel similarly pleads for forgiveness and deliverance for God's people, echoing Amos's urgent intercession for small Jacob.
Ezekiel 11:13 repeats the plea 'Ah Lord GOD! wilt thou make a full end?' — directly echoing Amos's cry for a small remnant.
In Ezekiel 9:8, Ezekiel falls on his face and cries out for the remnant, mirroring Amos's intercession after the locust vision.
Jeremiah 42:2 asks the prophet to pray for a small remnant, directly reflecting Amos's plea for the small and vulnerable Jacob.
Isaiah 37:4 requests prayer for the remnant left, paralleling Amos's intercession for small Jacob in a time of judgment.
Numbers 14:17-19 records Moses pleading for forgiveness based on God's love — parallel to Amos's plea for Jacob.
Exodus 34:9 has Moses asking forgiveness for Israel's sin — parallel to Amos's cry 'forgive' for Jacob.
Exodus 32:12 continues Moses' intercession, reasoning about God's reputation — parallel to Amos's request for Jacob's survival.
Deuteronomy 9:19 recounts Moses' intercession that averted God's wrath—the same pattern of pleading for mercy that Amos follows here.
Exodus 32:32 has Moses pleading for forgiveness after the golden calf—a direct parallel to Amos's intercessory prayer to spare small Jacob.
Joel 2:17 echoes this plea for God to spare His small people, with priests weeping at the altar for mercy.
Revelation 9:4 forbids locusts from harming grass, reversing the imagery of locusts eating grass that triggers Amos's plea.
Deuteronomy 28:38 describes locusts as a covenant curse—the very judgment Amos sees and intercedes against in his vision.
Deuteronomy 28:42 continues the locust curse imagery—amplifying the destruction that Amos pleads to have stopped.
Exodus 10:15 describes locusts devouring every plant, mirroring the locust judgment that prompts Amos's intercession here.
Psalm 78:46 recalls God sending locusts as a plague on Egypt—the same kind of judgment Amos sees and prays against.
Jeremiah 14:7 pleads for God to act for His name's sake despite sin — similar to Amos crying 'forgive' because Jacob is small.
Jeremiah 14:20 confesses sin and acknowledges guilt, then pleads — parallel to Amos's intercession for Jacob.
Jeremiah 14:21 asks God not to reject His throne or break covenant — echoing Amos's plea for God to relent and forgive.
Numbers 11:2 shows Moses interceding to stop fire judgment—mirroring Amos's plea to halt the locust judgment.