Isaiah 2:7
Their land also is full of silver and gold, neither is there any end of their treasures; their land is also full of horses, neither is there any end of their chariots:
Cross-reference
Isaiah 30:16 shows Israel trusting in horses for escape rather than God—the same misplaced confidence as in Isaiah 2:7.
Isaiah 31:1 condemns relying on horses and chariots from Egypt—the very military strength Isaiah 2:7 says fills the land.
Deuteronomy 17:17 forbids kings from multiplying silver, gold, and horses—the very abundance of treasures and chariots that Isaiah describes in Israel.
Deuteronomy 17:17 forbids kings from amassing horses, silver, and gold—precisely what Isaiah 2:7 describes Israel doing.
1 Kings 4:26 records Solomon's vast horses and chariots — the very abundance Isaiah 2:7 condemns as misplaced trust.
1 Kings 10:21-27 shows Solomon amassing huge amounts of silver, horses, and chariots—the exact excesses Isaiah 2:7 later condemns.
1 Kings 10:26 details Solomon's chariot and horse accumulation — the specific excess Isaiah 2:7 criticizes.
2 Chronicles 9:20-25 parallels 1 Kings 10, detailing Solomon's wealth in silver, horses, and chariots—the same treasures Isaiah cites.
Psalm 20:7 contrasts trusting in horses and chariots vs. the Lord — directly echoing the misplaced trust Isaiah 2:7 implies.
Hosea 14:3 voices repentance from trusting horses and idols — the very sins Isaiah 2:7-8 condemns.
James 5:1-3 warns that gold and silver will corrode and witness against the rich—echoing Isaiah's critique of trusting in treasures.
Revelation 18:11-17 lists silver, gold, horses, and chariots among Babylon's wares—the same items Isaiah 2:7 says fill Israel's land.
2 Chronicles 9:28 records Solomon importing horses from many lands — the source of the abundance Isaiah 2:7 criticizes.