Leviticus 26:37

And they shall fall one upon another, as it were before a sword, when none pursueth: and ye shall have no power to stand before your enemies.

Cross-reference

Numbers 14:42 states Israel will be struck down before enemies because God is not with them—directly parallel to 'no power to stand'.

Joshua 7:12 Parallel

Joshua 7:12 says Israel cannot stand and flees because of sin—a direct historical example of this curse.

Judges 2:14 Parallel

Judges 2:14 describes Israel handed over to enemies, unable to resist—a clear parallel to 'no power to stand'.

Judges 7:22 Parallel

Judges 7:22 shows the Midianite army turning on each other in panic, matching the stumbling over one another without pursuer.

Deuteronomy 28:25 repeats the curse: defeated and fleeing seven ways—identical theme and wording.

Psalm 89:43 Allusion

In Psalm 89:43, 'you have not made him stand in battle' uses the same language of inability to stand before enemies.

In Jeremiah 46:16, 'He made many stumble, they fell' directly echoes the stumbling and fleeing imagery of the curse.

Daniel 8:7 Allusion

In Daniel 8:7, 'the ram had no power to stand' uses the exact phrase, showing a parallel scene of utter defeat.

1 Samuel 14:15 describes a great trembling sent by God on the Philistine camp, paralleling the divine‑induced panic here.

In 1 Samuel 14:16, the Philistine army scatters in panic—mirroring the curse of fleeing without pursuit, but applied to Israel's enemies.

In 2 Samuel 24:13, the punishment of three months fleeing from enemies directly reprises the curse of being unable to stand before foes.

In 1 Chronicles 21:12, the same option of fleeing before enemies is reiterated, echoing the covenant curse here.

In 2 Chronicles 6:24, Solomon's prayer anticipates defeat before enemies due to sin, mirroring the curse of no power to stand.

2 Chronicles 24:24 Prophetic fulfillment

In 2 Chronicles 24:24, the defeat of Judah despite a great army fulfills the curse that they would have no power to stand before enemies.

Psalm 44:10 Parallel

In Psalm 44:10, the lament 'you make us turn back from the foe' reflects the same covenantal curse of being routed.

In Lamentations 1:6, the princes flee in weakness from the pursuer, echoing the curse of no power to stand before enemies.