Isaiah 50:9
Behold, the Lord God will help me; who is he that shall condemn me? lo, they all shall wax old as a garment; the moth shall eat them up.
Cross-reference
Isaiah 50:7 also begins 'the Lord GOD helps me' — the same confident declaration repeated here, reinforcing the Servant's trust.
Isaiah 51:6-8 repeats the moth-and-garment image for the fate of opponents, reinforcing the promise of enduring righteousness.
Isaiah 51:8 repeats 'the moth will eat them up like a garment' — the same prophecy against the enemies of the righteous.
Psalm 102:26 contrasts perishing creation growing old like a garment with God's endurance—echoing the garment-wearing-out imagery for accusers.
Hebrews 1:11 quotes Psalm 102:26, using the garment-wearing-out metaphor to show Christ's eternal nature—parallel to opponents' fate here.
Romans 8:33 echoes the rhetorical question 'who will bring a charge?' — Paul applies the Servant's confidence to God's elect who are justified.
Hebrews 1:12 uses the same garment imagery — creation is rolled up like a robe, echoing how enemies wear out like a moth-eaten garment here.
Job 13:28 uses the same moth-eaten garment image to describe human decay—similar metaphor but applied to general mortality.
Psalm 39:11 uses moth imagery for how God consumes human beauty—similar metaphor but focusing on divine discipline rather than opponents.
Hosea 5:12 also uses a moth as a consuming agent, but there God is the moth against Israel — opposite direction from enemies being consumed.