Judges 6:10
And I said unto you, I am the Lord your God; fear not the gods of the Amorites, in whose land ye dwell: but ye have not obeyed my voice.
Cross-reference
Judges 2:2 contains the same accusation 'you have not obeyed my voice' and the same command against covenanting with local inhabitants.
Exodus 20:2 provides the foundational 'I am the LORD your God' which is quoted here as the basis for the command against other gods.
Exodus 20:3 commands 'no other gods', which is applied here as not fearing the gods of the Amorites.
In 2 Kings 17:35-39, the same covenant command not to fear other gods is restated, reinforcing the requirement that Israel disobeyed.
Jeremiah 9:13 cites 'not obeyed my voice' as the reason for judgment, linking it to forsaking the law and following Baals.
Jeremiah 42:21 charges the people with not obeying the voice of the LORD in response to a prophet's message, similar to the accusation here.
Jeremiah 43:4 records the same failure: 'did not obey the voice of the LORD' by refusing to stay in Judah, mirroring the pattern of disobedience.
2 Kings 17:13 summarizes God's warnings through prophets, which is exactly the pattern seen in Judges 6:10.
In 2 Kings 17:33, the same syncretism appears — fearing the LORD yet serving other gods, echoing the disobedience warned against here.
Jeremiah 10:2 warns against adopting pagan practices, a similar prohibition to not fearing the gods of the Amorites here.
In Jeremiah 43:7, the same disobedience to God's voice is seen as the people flee to Egypt, echoing the pattern in Judges.
Zephaniah 3:2 describes Jerusalem as listening to no voice, paralleling Israel's failure to obey God's voice in Judges.