1 Kings 19:14
And he said, I have been very jealous for the Lord God of hosts: because the children of Israel have forsaken thy covenant, thrown down thine altars, and slain thy prophets with the sword; and I, even I only, am left; and they seek my life, to take it away.
Cross-reference
In 1 Kings 19:9, God first asks 'What doest thou here?' — the question Elijah is again answering here after the still small voice.
In 1 Kings 19:10, Elijah gives this exact complaint earlier — he repeats the same words verbatim after the theophany.
1 Kings 18:22 records Elijah's earlier claim 'I alone am left,' which he repeats here, reinforcing his isolation.
In 1 Kings 18:30, Elijah repairs the destroyed altar of the LORD — the same altars he later laments are thrown down in 19:14.
Hebrews 8:9 quotes Jeremiah about Israel not continuing in the covenant, reflecting the same failure Elijah lamented.
In Deuteronomy 29:25, ‘they have forsaken the covenant’ — the exact phrase Elijah uses, linking his complaint to the covenant curse.
Hosea 6:7 says they transgressed the covenant like Adam, reinforcing Elijah's claim of covenant breaking.
Isaiah 1:4 denounces Israel for forsaking the LORD, directly paralleling Elijah's lament about covenant abandonment.
Jeremiah 22:9 explicitly states they forsook the covenant of the LORD, matching Elijah's charge against Israel.
Numbers 25:13 commends Phinehas' zeal for God, which echoes Elijah's own declaration of zeal.
In Acts 7:52, Stephen accuses the fathers of persecuting and slaying the prophets — directly matching Elijah's complaint.
In Luke 6:23, Jesus says the fathers persecuted the prophets — the same pattern of prophet-killing Elijah laments.
In Jeremiah 2:30, God laments that Israel devoured their prophets with the sword — exactly the accusation Elijah makes.
In Psalm 119:139, the psalmist's zeal consumes him because enemies forget God's words — closely matching Elijah's zeal for God's covenant being forsaken.
In 2 Kings 10:16, Jehu declares his zeal for the LORD — a phrase identical to Elijah's complaint, though Jehu's zeal was mixed with ambition.
Exodus 2:15 describes Moses fleeing from Pharaoh who sought his life, paralleling Elijah's flight from Jezebel.
Hebrews 11:37 lists prophets killed by the sword, echoing Elijah's complaint that Israel killed God's prophets.
In Jeremiah 50:5, the people seek to join the LORD in a perpetual covenant — the opposite of the covenant forsaking Elijah laments.
Psalm 78:37 describes Israel's heart not steadfast and unfaithful to the covenant, echoing Elijah's complaint.