Judges 6:5
For they came up with their cattle and their tents, and they came as grasshoppers for multitude; for both they and their camels were without number: and they entered into the land to destroy it.
Cross-references
Judges 7:12 repeats the same locust and camel imagery for Midianites, directly reinforcing the description here.
Judges 8:10 reveals the massive scale of Midian's army (15,000 survivors), confirming their countless numbers hinted at here.
In Judges 8:21, Gideon kills the Midianite kings, concluding the invasion described here.
Psalm 83:4-12 recalls the confederacy of Midian and Amalek against Israel, referencing the same coalition as here.
Isaiah 60:6 reverses the image: Midian's camels once brought devastation, now bring tribute to restored Israel.
Jeremiah 46:23 compares Egypt's army to locusts without number, echoing the same locust simile used for Midianites.
Jeremiah 51:14 also uses the locust simile for a vast invading army, though applied to Babylon's judgment.
Jeremiah 49:29 describes the plunder of nomadic tribes’ tents and camels, similar to the Midianite camp here.
Jeremiah 49:32 continues the judgment, with camels taken as spoil, echoing the countless camels of Judges 6:5.