Judges 10:6
And the children of Israel did evil again in the sight of the Lord, and served Baalim, and Ashtaroth, and the gods of Syria, and the gods of Zidon, and the gods of Moab, and the gods of the children of Ammon, and the gods of the Philistines, and forsook the Lord, and served not him.
Cross-reference
Judges 2:11-14 first introduces the cycle of apostasy that Judges 10:6 repeats, showing the same pattern of serving Baals and forsaking God.
Judges 3:7 similarly records Israel serving Baals and Asherahs, reinforcing the recurring sin pattern seen in Judges 10:6.
Judges 4:1 uses the same phrase 'again did evil' after Ehud's death, mirroring the cycle.
Judges 6:1 repeats the pattern of Israel doing evil, another instance of the recurring sin cycle.
Judges 2:13 records Israel's earlier worship of Baal and Ashtaroth — here they repeat the same idolatry with an expanded list of gods.
Judges 16:23 identifies Dagon as the Philistine god worshipped, specifying one of the gods Israel served in the list.
2 Chronicles 28:23 gives a specific instance of worshiping the gods of Aram, the same gods listed in Judges 10:6.
2 Kings 23:13 lists the same gods—Ashtoreth, Chemosh, Milcom—that Josiah destroys, showing the persistent idolatry.
1 Kings 11:5 shows Solomon worshiping Ashtoreth (Sidon) and Molek (Ammon), both gods mentioned in Judges 10:6.
1 Kings 11:7 adds Chemosh (Moab) and Molek (Ammon) to Solomon's idolatry, matching the gods of Moab and Ammon in Judges 10:6.
1 Kings 11:33 lists Ashtoreth, Chemosh, and Molek—three gods directly overlapping with those in Judges 10:6.
1 Kings 16:31 describes Ahab serving Baal and marrying a Sidonian, connecting to the Baals and Sidonian gods in Judges 10:6.
Hosea 11:2 describes Israel sacrificing to Baals and carved images, matching the idolatry detailed here.
Hosea 2:13 condemns Israel for burning incense to Baals, directly echoing the Baal worship listed here.
Psalm 78:58 says Israel provoked God with idols and high places — the same sin of serving other gods that is listed here.
2 Kings 22:17 recounts Israel burning incense to other gods, provoking God — the identical sin of serving foreign deities seen here.
1 Samuel 7:3 calls Israel to put away foreign gods and Baals — the very idols they cling to here, showing the contrast between repentance and rebellion.
Deuteronomy 31:16 prophesies that Israel would prostitute themselves after foreign gods — this verse shows that prophecy coming true.
Deuteronomy 13:6 warns against being enticed to serve other gods — the precise sin Israel commits here by worshiping a catalog of foreign deities.
Deuteronomy 7:4 warns that intermarriage leads to serving other gods—the very sin committed in Judges 10:6.
2 Kings 17:29-31 depicts various foreign gods worshiped by relocated peoples, paralleling the multiple deities listed in Judges 10:6.
Genesis 19:38 records the births of Moab and Ammon, ancestors of nations whose gods Israel later served.
2 Kings 17:16 recounts worship of Baal and Asherah poles, similar to the Baals and Ashtoreths in Judges 10:6.
Jeremiah 2:13 likens forsaking God to broken cisterns, echoing the folly of serving other gods as in Judges.
Ezekiel 16:15 uses the harlotry metaphor for Israel's unfaithfulness, mirroring the idolatry described here with foreign gods.
Ezekiel 16:28 mentions Israel's harlotry with Assyria, paralleling the worship of Syrian gods listed here.