Exodus 22:6 Cross References
Exodus 22:6
6: "If a fire gets out of control and goes into another person's field, destroying the sheaves or the standing grain, then the one who started the fire must pay for the lost crops.
Exodus 22:9
- "Suppose there is a dispute between two people as to who owns a particular ox, donkey, sheep, article of clothing, or anything else. Both parties must come before God for a decision, and the person whom God declares guilty must pay double to the other.
Judges 15:4
- Then he went out and caught three hundred foxes. He tied their tails together in pairs, and he fastened a torch to each pair of tails.
- Then he lit the torches and let the foxes run through the fields of the Philistines. He burned all their grain to the ground, including the grain still in piles and all that had been bundled. He also destroyed their grapevines and olive trees.
2 Samuel 14:30
- So Absalom said to his servants, "Go and set fire to Joab's barley field, the field next to mine." So they set his field on fire, as Absalom had commanded.
- Then Joab came to Absalom and demanded, "Why did your servants set my field on fire?"
Exodus 22:12
- But if the animal or property was stolen, payment must be made to the owner.
Exodus 21:33
- "Suppose someone digs or uncovers a well and fails to cover it, and then an ox or a donkey falls into it.
- The owner of the well must pay in full for the dead animal but then gets to keep it.