Judges 10:10
And the children of Israel cried unto the Lord, saying, We have sinned against thee, both because we have forsaken our God, and also served Baalim.
Cross-reference
Judges 3:9 records the first instance of Israel crying out after oppression — this same pattern of cry and deliverance recurs here.
Judges 2:11 records the original sin of serving Baals that Israel confesses here — the same cycle of rebellion and repentance.
1 Samuel 12:10 records a nearly identical confession of sinning by forsaking the LORD and serving Baals, showing a recurring repentance pattern.
Psalm 106:44 says God looked upon their distress and heard their cry — the same cry here leads to divine compassion in the narrative.
In 1 Samuel 7:6, Israel also confesses 'We have sinned against the LORD' — a direct verbal parallel to this confession.
2 Chronicles 15:4 perfectly mirrors this pattern: distress leads to turning to the Lord, and he is found — a strong thematic parallel.
2 Kings 22:17 describes forsaking the Lord and provoking his anger — the same sin Israel confesses here, but from God's perspective.
Psalm 106:43 summarizes the cycle: God delivered them, yet they rebelled and were brought low — exactly the pattern here.
Isaiah 1:4 accuses Israel of forsaking the Lord — the very sin they confess here, though as a prophetic indictment rather than a cry.
Psalm 107:13 describes the pattern of crying to the LORD in trouble and being delivered — the same dynamic at work here.
In Psalm 107:19, the same pattern of crying to the Lord in distress appears, though without the specific confession of sin found here.
Hosea 5:15 shows God withdrawing until Israel seeks him in distress — mirroring the repentance pattern seen in this confession.