Isaiah 34:7
And the unicorns shall come down with them, and the bullocks with the bulls; and their land shall be soaked with blood, and their dust made fat with fatness.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 50:27 commands slaying bullocks and sending them to slaughter, directly paralleling the slaughter imagery of bulls here.
Ezekiel 32:6 waters the land with blood in judgment, paralleling the blood-soaked ground described here.
Ezekiel 39:18 speaks of eating bullocks and drinking blood in a sacrificial feast, echoing the bull and blood imagery here.
2 Samuel 1:22 uses the same phrase 'blood of the slain, fat of the mighty' in a battle lament, echoing the bloody fatness here.
Numbers 23:22 uses the same 'wild ox' to describe Israel's strength—contrasting with the wild oxen falling under judgment here.
Numbers 24:8 again calls Israel a wild ox that devours enemies—opposite to the wild oxen being devoured in this judgment.
Deuteronomy 33:17 portrays Israel as a wild ox goring nations—contrasting with the wild oxen falling as victims here.
Psalm 22:12 depicts enemies as 'strong bulls of Bashan', mirroring the bull imagery used for hostile forces here.
Psalm 22:21 mentions 'horns of the unicorns' (wild oxen), the same animal imagery as the unicorns here.
Jeremiah 50:11 uses the same 'growing fat' metaphor for Babylon's arrogance before judgment, linking to the bulls and fatness here.
Psalm 92:10 exalts the righteous with a wild ox horn—contrasting with wild oxen falling under God's wrath.