Jeremiah 48:27
For was not Israel a derision unto thee? was he found among thieves? for since thou spakest of him, thou skippedst for joy.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 48:39 shows Moab becoming a derision himself — poetic justice for the one who derided Israel here.
Jeremiah 12:14 promises God will pluck up evil neighbors who harmed Israel — Moab, who derided Israel here, faces that judgment.
Jeremiah 2:26 uses the same thief imagery: as a thief is shamed when caught, so Israel is shamed—the metaphor Moab used to mock.
Psalm 44:13 echoes Israel being a 'derision and scorn' to neighbors — exactly the taunt Moab directed at Israel here.
Zephaniah 2:10 states Moab's taunting will bring judgment, reinforcing the theme that mocking Israel incurs divine retribution.
Zephaniah 2:8 directly records Moab's taunts against God's people, matching the accusation in Jeremiah that Moab made Israel a derision.
Obadiah 1:13 condemns Edom for gloating over Israel's disaster, similar to Moab's derision here. Both accuse a nation of mocking Judah in her calamity.
Obadiah 1:12 directly forbids gloating over Judah's ruin, the exact sin Moab committed against Israel.
Ezekiel 35:15 condemns Edom for rejoicing over Israel's desolation, a direct parallel to Moab's rejoicing here.
Ezekiel 25:8 records Moab explicitly mocking Judah, reinforcing their derision of Israel mentioned here.
Proverbs 24:18 adds that rejoicing may cause God to remove the enemy's punishment, a consequence Moab likely faced.
Proverbs 24:17 warns against rejoicing when your enemy falls, directly opposing Moab's glee over Israel's downfall.
Psalm 44:13 echoes Israel being a 'derision and scorn' to neighbors — exactly the taunt Moab directed at Israel here.
Ezekiel 25:6 condemns Ammon for rejoicing against Israel — same malice as Moab's derision here, both face judgment.
Lamentations 3:14 speaks of being a laughingstock — mirroring Israel's experience of derision from Moab here.
Ezekiel 26:2 shows Tyre gloating over Jerusalem's fall, a similar attitude of rejoicing over Israel's misfortune.
Lamentations 1:21 describes enemies rejoicing over Jerusalem's fall — similar to Moab's glee over Israel here.
Ezekiel 36:2 quotes enemies saying 'Aha!' over Israel's land, echoing the contemptuous attitude of Moab.
Psalm 80:6 laments that enemies laugh at Israel, paralleling Moab's derision but in a general lament context.