Deuteronomy 28:51
And he shall eat the fruit of thy cattle, and the fruit of thy land, until thou be destroyed: which also shall not leave thee either corn, wine, or oil, or the increase of thy kine, or flocks of thy sheep, until he have destroyed thee.
Cross-reference
Deuteronomy 28:33 already stated that a foreign nation would eat the fruit, reinforcing the same curse.
Habakkuk 3:17 lists the same loss of fruit and flock — the curse’s fulfillment — yet responds with faith rather than despair.
Ezekiel 12:19 echoes this curse: the land stripped of produce and inhabitants eating in dismay as divine judgment.
Jeremiah 17:3 also promises giving substance to spoil, echoing the curse of enemy taking resources.
Jeremiah 15:13 says treasures will be given to spoil, similar to the enemy consuming produce in the curse.
Isaiah 62:8 reverses the curse by swearing enemies will no longer eat Israel's corn, contrasting with the deprivation.
Isaiah 1:7 describes strangers devouring the land, matching the curse of enemies consuming produce.
In Zephaniah 1:13, judgment says they will not drink wine from planted vineyards, echoing the curse of not enjoying produce.
In Ezekiel 25:4, God gives Ammon to the East who will eat their fruit and drink milk, directly paralleling the curse.
In Psalm 128:2, eating the fruit of your labor is a blessing, opposite to the curse of others devouring it.
Nehemiah 9:37 confesses the land's yield goes to foreign kings — a direct admission of this curse being fulfilled because of sin.
Judges 6:4 explicitly describes enemies devouring produce and livestock — a vivid realization of this covenant curse.
Judges 6:3 recounts Midianites coming against crops — a direct historical outworking of this curse on unfaithful Israel.
In Job 31:8, Job invokes a curse of others eating his crops if guilty, directly echoing the Deuteronomic curse.
1 Samuel 23:1 has Philistines robbing threshing floors — another instance of enemies taking grain as the curse threatens.
In Psalm 109:11, a curse asks for strangers to plunder the fruits of labor, similar to enemies consuming all produce.
In Job 5:5, the hungry consume the harvest of the wicked, mirroring the curse of enemies devouring all produce.
Genesis 14:11 shows enemies taking all food from Sodom — a historical example of the plunder described in this curse.