1 Kings 22:13
And the messenger that was gone to call Micaiah spake unto him, saying, Behold now, the words of the prophets declare good unto the king with one mouth: let thy word, I pray thee, be like the word of one of them, and speak that which is good.
Cross-reference
1 Kings 22:8 reveals Ahab's hatred of Micaiah because he never prophesies good—provides the reason the messenger tries to sway Micaiah here.
Isaiah 30:10 directly parallels the demand: 'prophesy illusions' — the messenger here tells Micaiah to speak favorably.
Isaiah 30:11 records people telling the prophet to stop speaking about God—mirroring the request here to speak only pleasing words to the king.
Hosea 7:3 describes making the king glad with lies—the same dynamic as the messenger urging Micaiah to speak favorably to please Ahab.
Amos 7:13-17 shows Amaziah commanding Amos to stop prophesying at the king's sanctuary—parallel to the messenger pressuring Micaiah to conform.
Micah 2:6 records people saying 'do not preach'—echoing the same rejection of truthful prophecy seen in the request for flattery.
Micah 2:11 describes people wanting a preacher of lies and pleasant things—directly parallels the false prophets and the pressure on Micaiah.
Numbers 22:6 shows Balak pressuring Balaam to speak favorably—a similar test of a prophet who must speak only God's word despite human pressure.
Jeremiah 8:11 describes false prophets crying 'peace' when there is none — the same pressure Micaiah faces to speak favorably.
Luke 6:26 warns against false prophets who seek everyone's praise — the messenger wants Micaiah to say what pleases the king.
1 Corinthians 2:4 contrasts persuasive words with Spirit's power — opposing the flattering speech the messenger wanted from Micaiah.
1 Corinthians 2:14-16 explains that the natural person rejects God's truth—illuminates why the messenger and Ahab prefer flattery over Micaiah's words.