Jeremiah 48:44
He that fleeth from the fear shall fall into the pit; and he that getteth up out of the pit shall be taken in the snare: for I will bring upon it, even upon Moab, the year of their visitation, saith the Lord.
Cross-reference
In Jeremiah 11:23, 'year of their punishment' is used for Anathoth — showing that the same judgment formula applies to Moab and rebellious Israelites.
In Jeremiah 23:12, 'year of their punishment' with slippery paths and falling mirrors the pit and snare — judgment is inescapable.
In Isaiah 10:3, 'day of punishment' asks where to flee — directly parallel to the fleeing from terror into pit/snare.
In Amos 2:14, even the swift cannot flee — the same point that no one escapes the judgment, as illustrated by the pit and snare.
In Amos 2:15, the mighty cannot save themselves — reinforcing that no skill or speed can avoid the judgment's traps.
In Amos 5:19, fleeing a lion leads to a bear, then a snake — the exact same cascade of calamities as the terror, pit, and snare.
In Genesis 14:10, fleeing kings fall into bitumen pits — a literal precedent for the pit imagery in Moab's judgment.
Isaiah 24:17 uses the exact same triad 'terror, pit, snare' against the whole earth — a direct verbal parallel to this judgment on Moab.
Lamentations 3:47 quotes the exact same 'terror, pit, snare' as a lament for Judah — directly echoing this judgment motif.
In Luke 21:35, the same 'snare' image describes sudden judgment on all earth dwellers, echoing Moab's fate.
In Amos 9:1-4, no hiding place — from Sheol to heaven — underscores the impossibility of escape, though not in a chain pattern.