Psalm 60:3

Thou hast shewed thy people hard things: thou hast made us to drink the wine of astonishment.

Cross-reference

Psalm 71:20 Parallel

Psalm 71:20 echoes the same phrase 'showed...hard/troubles' — a personal testimony of God's discipline and restoration, mirroring the communal experience.

Psalm 75:8 Parallel

Psalm 75:8 develops the same cup/wine metaphor for God's wrath — the wicked drink the dregs, while here God's people drink the wine of staggering.

Isaiah 51:17 explicitly calls it the 'cup of trembling' (kos hatar'elah) — the same phrase as 'wine of astonishment' — depicting Jerusalem's judgment.

Isaiah 51:22 continues the cup imagery, promising that God will remove the cup of trembling from His people — a reversal of the judgment here.

Jeremiah 25:15 uses the 'wine cup of fury' as a symbol of judgment on nations, expanding the same metaphor used for Israel's discipline.

Lamentations 4:21 applies the cup of judgment to Edom, showing that the same 'wine of astonishment' extends to all who oppose God.

Ezekiel 23:31 speaks of giving the 'cup' into the hand of unfaithful Jerusalem, directly linking to the 'wine of astonishment' as judgment for idolatry.

Ezekiel 23:32 expands the cup of staggering to a specific judgment on unfaithful Israel, deepening the metaphor of divine retribution.

Habakkuk 2:16 applies the same cup of wrath to Babylon, emphasizing shame and retribution for the wicked.

Isaiah 63:6 Parallel

Isaiah 63:6 directly parallels 'made them drunk in my wrath,' reinforcing the cup of God's anger.

Jeremiah 13:13 explicitly says God will fill people with drunkenness as judgment, closely matching the wine of staggering.

In Jeremiah 25:18, the same cup of God's wrath makes nations stagger — directly parallel to the 'wine of staggering' here.

Jeremiah 48:26 depicts Moab drunk from God's wrath — the same metaphor of forced drunkenness as judgment.

Revelation 14:10 explicitly uses the same 'wine of God's wrath' imagery — a clear NT echo of this OT judgment.

Lamentations 3:15 describes being filled with bitterness and wormwood — a similar drinking metaphor for divine judgment.

Jeremiah 9:15 uses poisonous water as a judgment drink, similar to the wine of staggering but with different imagery.