Jeremiah 48:15
Moab is spoiled, and gone up out of her cities, and his chosen young men are gone down to the slaughter, saith the King, whose name is the Lord of hosts.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 48:4 is part of the same oracle, describing Moab's destruction with 'her little ones' crying — reinforcing the judgment on Moab here.
Jeremiah 48:8-25 expands the same prophecy: Moab’s destruction and the fall of its young men are detailed throughout.
Jeremiah 48:12 continues the same oracle against Moab, predicting its destruction with the imagery of emptying jars.
Jeremiah 48:32 mourns the ruined vineyards of Moab, part of the same judgment prophecy against this nation.
Jeremiah 46:18 shares the exact divine title 'the King, whose name is the LORD of hosts' used here — linking judgments on Egypt and Moab.
Jeremiah 50:27 uses the same phrase 'go down to the slaughter' for Babylon's judgment — echoing the fate of Moab's young men here.
Jeremiah 51:40 repeats the 'to the slaughter' imagery for Babylon — same motif of divine judgment as here.
Jeremiah 51:57 includes the identical phrase 'declares the King, whose name is the LORD of hosts' — same formula in judgment on Babylon.
Jeremiah 50:30 uses nearly identical language—'young men will fall'—applying the same judgment formula to Babylon.
Malachi 1:14 uses the same phrase 'says the LORD Almighty' and calls God a great King, directly echoing the divine title here.
In Amos 4:10, the same image of young men slain by the sword appears as divine punishment—here against Israel, there against Moab.
James 5:4 similarly calls God 'Lord Almighty' (Sabaoth), using the same divine title to emphasize His awareness of injustice.