Daniel 8:10

And it waxed great, even to the host of heaven; and it cast down some of the host and of the stars to the ground, and stamped upon them.

Cross-reference

Daniel 8:7 Parallel

In Daniel 8:7, the goat tramples the ram with the same phrase 'cast down and trampled' — showing the little horn's violent actions escalate from the goat's.

Daniel 8:24 Parallel

Daniel 8:24 expands on the horn's destruction of the holy people, directly explaining the trampling of the host in 8:10.

Daniel 8:25 Parallel

Daniel 8:25 describes the horn standing against the Prince of princes, continuing the attack on the heavenly host from 8:10.

Daniel 11:28 shows the king of the North acting against the holy covenant, mirroring the horn's trampling of God's people in 8:10.

Daniel 11:30 continues the king's fury against the holy covenant, aligning with the horn's aggression against the host in 8:10.

Daniel 11:33-36 details the persecution of the wise and the king's self-exaltation, a fuller narrative of the horn's trampling in 8:10.

In Daniel 11:22, overwhelming forces are broken and the prince of the covenant falls — mirroring the trampling of the host and the Prince.

Daniel 7:7 Parallel

In Daniel 7:7, the fourth beast tramples and devours — a parallel image of destructive power over nations.

In Daniel 11:35, the wise stumble to be refined — unlike the violent trampling here, but both involve suffering of the faithful.

Revelation 12:4 directly parallels the horn's casting down stars, showing the dragon's cosmic rebellion as a New Testament echo.

In Revelation 6:13, stars fall from heaven like figs — a direct parallel to the stars cast down and trampled here.

Isaiah 14:13 shows the king of Babylon boasting to ascend above the stars, while the horn casts stars down — both rebel against God's order.

In Revelation 1:16, Christ holds seven stars securely — in contrast to the stars cast down here, showing divine control versus enemy attack.

In Revelation 11:2, the holy city is trampled by nations — a parallel image of trampling persecution, though the target differs.