Numbers 10:9
And if ye go to war in your land against the enemy that oppresseth you, then ye shall blow an alarm with the trumpets; and ye shall be remembered before the Lord your God, and ye shall be saved from your enemies.
Cross-reference
In Numbers 10:10, the same trumpets are used for gladness and feasts, contrasting with the war alarm in verse 9.
Numbers 31:6 shows Phinehas carrying the trumpets into battle — a direct execution of the war alarm command.
In Joshua 6:5, the priests blow trumpets at Jericho — a direct execution of the battle alarm command, resulting in divine victory.
In Judges 3:27, Ehud blows a trumpet to rally Israel after killing Eglon — a direct use of the trumpet signal in battle context.
In Judges 6:34, Gideon blows a trumpet when the Spirit comes — a clear instance of the battle alarm for God's deliverance.
In Judges 7:16-21, Gideon's army blows trumpets and smashes jars — a famous battle where trumpets signal God's victory over enemies.
In 2 Chronicles 13:14, priests blow trumpets in Abijah's battle, and God defeats the enemy — a later fulfillment of the same promise.
Ezekiel 7:14 shows the trumpet blown but God's wrath prevents battle — stark contrast to the rescue promised in Numbers 10:9.
In 2 Chronicles 13:12, Abijah cites priests with trumpets crying alarm, directly echoing the Numbers war instruction.
In Joel 2:1, the trumpet alarm warns of the day of the Lord, directly paralleling the alarm for war in Numbers.
1 Corinthians 14:8 uses the same battle-trumpet imagery to stress clear speech — alluding to the call to arms in Numbers 10:9.
Ezekiel 33:3-6 expands the trumpet's role to warning — different from the battle cry for rescue in Numbers, but both involve divine response.
Hosea 5:8 calls for the trumpet to sound in battle — echoing the same alarm from Numbers but here as a cry against God's people.
Jeremiah 6:17 mentions watchmen who sound the trumpet as a warning — similar role of trumpet as a signal, but here for deliverance.
Amos 3:6 links the trumpet sound to trembling and disaster from the LORD — opposite the intended rescue in Numbers 10:9.
Zephaniah 1:16 depicts the trumpet and battle cry on the Day of the Lord's judgment — a different outcome from the rescue promised in Numbers.
Jeremiah 6:1 tells Benjamin to blow the trumpet as alarm for approaching disaster — parallels the war-alarm trumpets here.