1 Kings 19:1
And Ahab told Jezebel all that Elijah had done, and withal how he had slain all the prophets with the sword.
Cross-reference
1 Kings 16:31 introduces Jezebel as Ahab's wife who led him into Baal worship — explaining her power and hostility to Elijah in this verse.
In 1 Kings 21:5-7, Ahab again reports to Jezebel and she takes charge — the same dynamic of her inciting him shown here.
1 Kings 21:25 notes that Jezebel incited Ahab to evil — directly explaining her reaction here when Ahab tells her about Elijah.
In 1 Kings 18:19, these are the prophets summoned to Carmel — the very ones Elijah killed, now reported to Jezebel.
Exodus 2:15 shows Moses fleeing Pharaoh's death threat — the same pattern of a prophet escaping a king's wrath after confronting evil.
Jeremiah 26:21 tells of Uriah fleeing a king's death threat — a direct parallel to Elijah's flight from Jezebel here.
Revelation 2:20 invokes Jezebel as a symbol of false teaching — directly referencing the same queen who threatened Elijah.
2 Kings 9:30 depicts Jezebel's final moments — the same queen whose earlier threat drove Elijah into hiding meets judgment.
2 Kings 9:22 reveals Jezebel's long-standing idolatry that fueled her hatred of God's prophets, including Elijah here.
Hebrews 11:37 lists prophets killed by the sword — Jezebel's threat here places Elijah among those persecuted for God.