Nehemiah 9:36
Behold, we are servants this day, and for the land that thou gavest unto our fathers to eat the fruit thereof and the good thereof, behold, we are servants in it:
Cross-reference
Nehemiah 1:3 describes the same post-exilic distress—trouble and shame in the land—echoing the slavery cry.
Deuteronomy 28:48 prophesied they would serve enemies in need — now in Nehemiah this curse is realized as slavery in the land.
Ezra 9:9 also says 'we are slaves' yet notes God's steadfast love — Nehemiah laments the same condition of servitude.
Deuteronomy 28:33 foretold foreigners eating the land's fruit and oppression—Nehemiah sees this curse fulfilled in their slavery.
Ezra 9:7 similarly confesses being given into foreign hands for iniquities, parallel to the slavery lament here.
Jeremiah 25:18 prophesied Jerusalem becoming a curse and desolation—Nehemiah's slavery is the realized judgment.
Lamentations 5:5 laments relentless pursuers and no rest—same experience of oppressive foreign yoke as in Nehemiah.
Ezekiel 11:9 threatens being given into foreigners' hands—Nehemiah's slavery is the fulfillment of that judgment.
Joel 2:17 prays that God's heritage not be a reproach—Nehemiah's slavery embodies that reproachful state.
2 Chronicles 12:8 shows Israel becoming servants to foreign kings as discipline — similar to the slavery described in Nehemiah.
Ezekiel 17:14 describes the kingdom humbled under Babylon—Nehemiah's slavery continues that subjugated condition.