Jeremiah 48:38
There shall be lamentation generally upon all the housetops of Moab, and in the streets thereof: for I have broken Moab like a vessel wherein is no pleasure, saith the Lord.
Cross-reference
In Jeremiah 48:12, God threatens to break Moab's vessels—the same imagery of being broken like a vessel is fulfilled here.
Jeremiah 22:28 calls Coniah a 'broken pot no one cares for' — the identical metaphor of a disregarded vessel used here for Moab's destruction.
Psalm 2:9 uses the same 'dash in pieces like a potter's vessel' imagery for God's judgment on the nations.
Isaiah 15:3 depicts Moab wailing on rooftops and streets — the exact same locations and actions as Jeremiah's lament, reinforcing the prophecy against Moab.
Isaiah 30:14 describes a potter's vessel shattered completely, echoing the broken vessel metaphor for divine judgment.
Hosea 8:8 says Israel is 'like a vessel no one wants' — nearly identical phrase to Moab's fate here.
Romans 9:22 mentions 'vessels of wrath prepared for destruction' — directly ties to God breaking vessels in judgment.
Revelation 2:27 quotes Psalm 2:9 imagery of breaking earthen pots — same judgment metaphor as here.
In Isaiah 15:2, Moab's mourning includes shaved heads—directly parallel to the lamentation described here.