Daniel 8:24
And his power shall be mighty, but not by his own power: and he shall destroy wonderfully, and shall prosper, and practise, and shall destroy the mighty and the holy people.
Cross-reference
Daniel 8:10 shows the little horn casting down stars (holy people), a direct parallel to destroying the mighty and holy here.
Daniel 8:12 directly describes the same little horn's success and trampling of truth, connecting to his devastation of the holy people.
In Daniel 8:25, this same horn grows cunning, rises against the Prince of princes, and is broken by no human hand.
Daniel 7:25 describes the little horn oppressing holy people for a time, times, half a time, mirroring the devastation in this verse.
Daniel 11:31-36 recounts the abomination and persecution of the wise, continuing the same theme of the little horn's assault on the holy.
Daniel 11:36 portrays a king exalting himself above every god, matching the little horn's arrogant success and persecution here.
In Daniel 12:7, the timeframe of this persecution is given as a time, times, and half a time until the shattering of holy people ends.
Daniel 7:21 explicitly says the horn waged war against holy people and defeated them, a direct parallel to the destruction here.
In Daniel 11:28, the same king returns with wealth but sets his heart against the holy covenant, echoing the destruction of saints here.
In Revelation 13:3-9, the beast war against the saints and overcomes them, echoing the little horn's destruction of the holy people here.
In Revelation 16:6, the same theme of shedding holy people's blood is echoed, linking divine judgment to the persecution in Daniel.
Revelation 17:6 depicts the great prostitute drunk with the blood of saints, directly paralleling the destruction of holy people in Daniel.
In Revelation 11:7, the beast from the abyss makes war on and kills the witnesses, echoing the little horn's war on the saints.
In Revelation 13:7, the beast is allowed to make war on and conquer the saints, directly paralleling the little horn's destruction here.
Revelation 17:12 describes ten kings receiving authority for one hour, reflecting the delegated power theme—the little horn's strength not from himself.
Revelation 17:17 reveals God's sovereignty behind the beast's rule, a parallel to the little horn's power not being his own.
Revelation 19:2 speaks of avenging the blood of God's servants, offering the divine justice counterpart to the persecution in Daniel.