Micah 3:6
Therefore night shall be unto you, that ye shall not have a vision; and it shall be dark unto you, that ye shall not divine; and the sun shall go down over the prophets, and the day shall be dark over them.
Cross-reference
Isaiah 8:20-22 describes darkness and distress for those rejecting God's word — similar to the darkness and loss of vision in Micah 3:6.
Isaiah 29:10 speaks of God pouring out a spirit of deep sleep on prophets, closing their eyes—same theme as Micah's night.
Psalm 74:9 laments no prophet and no signs — reflecting the same judgment of darkness without vision in Micah 3:6.
Jeremiah 13:16 warns that failure to give glory leads to darkness, echoing Micah's judgment of darkness on false prophets.
Jeremiah 15:9 uses 'sun gone down' imagery for judgment, directly paralleling Micah's sun going down over prophets.
Zechariah 13:2-4 describes removal of false prophets and shame on their visions, paralleling Micah's darkness on prophets.
Ezekiel 13:23 directly says false prophets will see no more visions, matching Micah's 'no vision' judgment.
Amos 8:9 foretells God causing the sun to go down at noon, a cosmic darkness parallel to Micah's dark day.
Luke 6:39 uses the same 'blind leading blind' image, matching Micah's darkness for prophets — leaders who cannot see.
In Matthew 15:14, Jesus' 'blind guides' metaphor parallels the spiritual darkness on prophets in Micah — both depict leaders without sight.
Zechariah 13:4 echoes the same shame on false prophets who lose their visions and cover themselves, paralleling Micah's darkness.
In Zechariah 10:2, diviners see lies and false dreams — same judgment against false visions.
In Amos 8:11, a famine of hearing God's words parallels the loss of vision and divine communication here.
In Ezekiel 7:26, people seek a vision from the prophet but find none — identical theme of withheld prophecy.
In Lamentations 2:9, prophets also find no vision from the LORD — a direct echo of this darkness.
In Ezekiel 3:26, the prophet is made mute — a different form of prophetic judgment, like the loss of vision here.
In Jeremiah 6:15, false prophets feel no shame and will fall, echoing the judgment on corrupt leaders here.
In Isaiah 56:11, greedy shepherds lack understanding and face judgment, paralleling Micah's condemned prophets.