Deuteronomy 32:32

For their vine is of the vine of Sodom, and of the fields of Gomorrah: their grapes are grapes of gall, their clusters are bitter:

Cross-reference

In Deuteronomy 29:18, a 'root bearing poisonous and bitter fruit' mirrors the poison grapes of Deut 32:32—same imagery for apostasy.

Isaiah 1:10 Allusion

In Isaiah 1:10, the prophet directly calls Israel 'rulers of Sodom' and 'people of Gomorrah', using the same epitome of evil as Deut 32:32.

Isaiah 5:4 Parallel

In Isaiah 5:4, God's vineyard yields wild grapes instead of good—paralleling the poison grapes from Sodom's vine in Deut 32:32.

In Lamentations 4:6, Jerusalem's punishment is compared to Sodom's—echoing Deut 32:32's use of Sodom as the ultimate example of divine judgment.

In Ezekiel 16:45-51, Sodom is explicitly named as Jerusalem's sister, highlighting the same sins—Sodom's vine of poison in Deut 32:32.

In Matthew 11:24, Jesus says judgment for Chorazin will be worse than for Sodom—using Sodom as a benchmark, like the poison from Sodom in Deut 32:32.

Isaiah 5:2 Parallel

Isaiah 5:2 uses the same vine metaphor: God's vineyard yields wild grapes, illustrating Israel's corruption.

Jeremiah 23:14 directly compares corrupt prophets to Sodom and Gomorrah, echoing the source of Israel's vine.

Ezekiel 16:46 names Sodom as a sister city, reinforcing the Sodom corruption theme.

Acts 8:23 Citation

Acts 8:23 quotes the 'gall of bitterness' phrase from the LXX, directly borrowing the Deut 32:32 language.

In Jeremiah 2:21, Israel is a choice vine turned wild—paralleling the poison vine of enemies in Deut 32:32; both show corruption through vine imagery.

Revelation 14:19 uses grape harvest imagery for God's wrath, similar to the judgment implied in Deut 32:32.

In Hebrews 12:15, 'root of bitterness' echoes Deut 29:18, but also ties to the bitter clusters of Deut 32:32—warns against spiritual poison.