Judges 4:15
And the Lord discomfited Sisera, and all his chariots, and all his host, with the edge of the sword before Barak; so that Sisera lighted down off his chariot, and fled away on his feet.
Cross-reference
Judges 5:20 poetically describes the same divine intervention — stars fighting from heaven against Sisera.
Judges 5:21 recounts the Kishon river sweeping away the enemy, elaborating on the same battle.
Judges 5:28 shows Sisera's mother anxiously waiting for his chariot — contrasting the defeat here with her ironic ignorance.
Judges 7:9 is God's promise to Gideon before battle — another instance of divine victory assurance paralleling the outcome here.
Psalm 83:9 explicitly cites the defeat of Sisera as a model for God's judgment on enemies.
Psalm 83:10 continues the reference to Sisera's destruction at Endor, directly referencing the same event.
Hebrews 11:32 mentions Barak among faith heroes, linking this battle to his faith.
In Exodus 14:25, God also causes enemy chariots to malfunction, creating panic — the same divine tactic against Sisera's chariots here.
In 1 Samuel 7:10, God similarly confuses the Philistines with thunder — the same 'routing' action against Israel's enemies as here.
Psalm 33:17 declares horses futile for deliverance — exactly illustrated here as Sisera's chariots are routed despite their might.
Joshua 10:8 records God's promise to give enemies into Israel's hand — a similar assurance whose fulfillment is seen in the routing here.
Joshua 10:10 describes the Lord throwing enemies into confusion, similar to the rout in Judges 4:15.
2 Kings 7:6 also shows the Lord causing enemy panic through a supernatural sound, like the routing of Sisera.
2 Chronicles 13:15-17 records God defeating Jeroboam's army, a parallel divine victory where enemies flee.