Isaiah 10:27
And it shall come to pass in that day, that his burden shall be taken away from off thy shoulder, and his yoke from off thy neck, and the yoke shall be destroyed because of the anointing.
Cross-reference
Isaiah 9:4 uses identical imagery of breaking the yoke and burden, and also references Midian, reinforcing the same deliverance theme.
Isaiah 14:25 explicitly promises to break Assyria's yoke from Israel's shoulders, directly matching the deliverance in 10:27.
2 Kings 18:13 describes Sennacherib's invasion, the historical context of the yoke that Isaiah 10:27 promises will be removed.
2 Kings 18:14 shows Hezekiah submitting to the Assyrian yoke, contrasting sharply with the divine removal promised in Isaiah 10:27.
Psalm 2:1-3 shows rebels trying to break God's bonds—contrasting God breaking the yoke of oppression in Isaiah. Direct reversal of imagery.
Nahum 1:9-13 promises to break Nineveh's yoke from Judah, a later prophecy echoing the same liberation as Isaiah 10:27.
Psalm 81:6 uses the same imagery of removing burden from shoulders, recalling God's deliverance from Egypt — a pattern for the coming rescue here.
Jeremiah 2:20 recalls God breaking Israel's yoke, which they then rejected — mirroring the liberation imagery here.
Jeremiah 30:8 directly echoes the breaking of yoke from neck and bursting bonds — almost identical promise of deliverance.
Ezekiel 34:27 promises breaking the bars of yoke and deliverance — clear parallel to the liberation language here.
Nahum 1:13 directly quotes the promise to break yoke and burst bonds — a near verbatim parallel.