1 Kings 14:6
And it was so, when Ahijah heard the sound of her feet, as she came in at the door, that he said, Come in, thou wife of Jeroboam; why feignest thou thyself to be another? for I am sent to thee with heavy tidings.
Cross-reference
In 1 Kings 14:2, Jeroboam instructs his wife to disguise herself, which Ahijah sees through here.
In 1 Kings 14:5, God tells Ahijah she is coming disguised; now Ahijah acts on that revelation.
1 Kings 14:10 specifies the heavy tidings: God will cut off every male from Jeroboam's house.
1 Kings 14:11 adds that those who die in the city will be eaten by dogs and birds — the grim fate of Jeroboam's house.
1 Kings 21:18-24 records Elijah's judgment against Ahab and Jezebel for Naboth's murder — similar pattern of a prophet denouncing a king's sin.
1 Samuel 15:26 has Samuel declaring God's rejection of Saul for disobedience—same pattern of a prophet delivering a verdict of rejection.
In Job 5:13, God catches the wise in their craftiness, echoing Ahijah seeing through the wife's disguise.
Jeremiah 21:2-7 has Jeremiah sent to Zedekiah with a message of judgment—mirroring Ahijah being sent to Jeroboam's wife with heavy tidings.
Daniel 4:19-25 shows Daniel reluctantly delivering a harsh judgment interpretation to Nebuchadnezzar—similar to Ahijah's heavy tidings to a king.
Daniel 5:17-28 has Daniel pronouncing judgment on Belshazzar for the writing on the wall—another prophet speaking hard truth to a king.
In Luke 20:20-23, Jesus perceives the deceit of spies pretending sincerity, just as Ahijah sees through the disguise.
Acts 5:9 parallels this: Peter confronts Sapphira for lying, noting the feet of those who buried her husband are at the door — same 'feet at the door' phrase exposing hidden sin.
Hebrews 4:13 affirms that nothing is hidden from God — Ahijah's knowledge of the disguised wife illustrates this omniscience.
1 Samuel 15:16 has Samuel confronting Saul with God's message of judgment — parallel to Ahijah confronting Jeroboam's wife with heavy tidings.