Micah 5:10
And it shall come to pass in that day, saith the Lord, that I will cut off thy horses out of the midst of thee, and I will destroy thy chariots:
Cross-reference
Psalm 20:7 contrasts trusting in chariots/horses with trusting God — exactly the reliance Micah 5:10 removes by cutting them off.
Psalm 33:17 declares the horse a false hope for salvation—directly reinforcing why God removes horses in Micah 5:10.
Hosea 1:7 states God delivers without horse or sword—echoing the promise that Israel’s military will be removed as their reliance.
Hosea 14:3 renounces riding on horses—directly parallels Micah 5:10’s removal of horses as a sign of repentance.
Zechariah 9:10 prophesies cutting off chariot and horse from Jerusalem—almost identical language to Micah 5:10’s destruction.
Psalm 46:9 shows God breaking bows and burning chariots—the same divine warfare against military trust seen in Micah 5:10.
Haggai 2:22 directly echoes this promise: God overthrows chariots and horses — a clear parallel to the destruction of military might here.
Matthew 21:5 depicts the king arriving without horses or chariots, contrasting the judgment on them here — peace replaces military reliance.