Proverbs 26:27

Whoso diggeth a pit shall fall therein: and he that rolleth a stone, it will return upon him.

Cross-reference

Proverbs 28:10 uses the same imagery: those who lead the righteous astray will fall into their own pit—reinforcing poetic justice.

Esther 7:10 Parallel

Esther 7:10 narrates Haman being hanged on his own gallows—a historical fulfillment of the 'digger falls into his own pit' principle.

Psalm 7:15 Parallel

Psalm 7:15 describes the wicked digging a pit and falling into it—an identical teaching reinforcing the proverb's lesson.

Psalm 7:16 Parallel

Psalm 7:16 uses the same pit-digging imagery: the wicked fall into the hole they made for others.

Psalm 9:15 Parallel

Psalm 9:15 echoes this: the nations sink in the pit they dug, caught in their own net.

Psalm 57:6 Parallel

Psalm 57:6 recounts enemies digging a pit but falling into it themselves — same retributive justice.

Ecclesiastes 10:8 repeats the same proverb verbatim about falling into one's own pit.

Jeremiah 18:20 uses the 'dig a pit' metaphor for plotting harm, but here the prophet is the victim, not the one falling.