Micah 4:13
Arise and thresh, O daughter of Zion: for I will make thine horn iron, and I will make thy hoofs brass: and thou shalt beat in pieces many people: and I will consecrate their gain unto the Lord, and their substance unto the Lord of the whole earth.
Cross-references
Micah 5:8-15 continues the theme of Israel as a lion crushing nations — same book, same conquest prophecy.
Isaiah 41:15 portrays Israel as a threshing sledge crushing mountains — the same metaphor for Israel's role in judgment as the horn and hoofs in Micah.
Zechariah 9:13-15 depicts God using Israel as weapons to devour enemies — same motif of divinely empowered conquest.
Revelation 2:27 echoes Psalm 2:9 about ruling with iron rod and shattering pots — directly parallels Micah's iron horn beating nations.
In Jeremiah 51:20, God calls Israel His hammer to break nations — mirroring the threshing and shattering imagery here.
Habakkuk 3:12 says God 'threshed the nations in anger' — the same threshing metaphor for divine judgment.
Zechariah 12:6 portrays Judah as a devouring fire among sheaves — a parallel image of God empowering them to destroy enemies.
In Jeremiah 51:33, Babylon is the threshing floor trampled — opposite perspective but same threshing judgment metaphor.
Daniel 2:44 describes God's kingdom breaking all kingdoms — similar language of shattering nations, but eschatological.
Revelation 2:26 promises authority over nations to overcomers — NT application of the dominion given to Zion.