Isaiah 17:6
Yet gleaning grapes shall be left in it, as the shaking of an olive tree, two or three berries in the top of the uppermost bough, four or five in the outmost fruitful branches thereof, saith the Lord God of Israel.
Cross-reference
Isaiah 24:13 repeats the olive-beating metaphor exactly—both describe a remnant after judgment.
Isaiah 1:9 speaks of a remnant of survivors spared from total destruction—akin to the few olives left after beating here.
Isaiah 10:22 declares that only a remnant of Israel will return—similar to the few olives left here.
1 Kings 19:18 reveals God preserving a remnant of 7,000—parallel to the few olives left as a remnant here.
Obadiah 1:5 uses the same grape-gathering imagery but says Edom will be left with nothing—contrasting the remnant left in Isaiah 17:6.
Micah 7:1 laments having only grape gleanings left—mirroring Isaiah's remnant image, but as a complaint of scarcity rather than hope.
Romans 9:27 quotes Isaiah about a remnant being saved—directly connecting to the remnant theme in Isaiah 17:6.
Jeremiah 3:14 says God will take one from a city and two from a family—exactly matching the remnant numbers in Isaiah 17:6.
Deuteronomy 4:27 warns that Israel will be left few among nations—similar to the few olives left after judgment here.