1 Kings 22:28
And Micaiah said, If thou return at all in peace, the Lord hath not spoken by me. And he said, Hearken, O people, every one of you.
Cross-reference
In 1 Kings 22:35, Ahab dies exactly as Micaiah's condition implied — the direct fulfillment of the prophecy from v28.
1 Kings 18:21-24 proposes a test to prove the true God, paralleling Micaiah's test to prove true prophecy by outcome.
In Numbers 16:29, Moses uses the same conditional test for prophetic authenticity — if they die naturally, then God has not sent him.
In Deuteronomy 18:20-22, the law defines the test for a false prophet by outcome; Micaiah applies that very test to his own prophecy.
2 Chronicles 18:27 repeats Micaiah's exact words, providing the parallel account of the same prophecy and test.
In Isaiah 44:26, God confirms the word of His servants; Micaiah's test hinges on God confirming his prophecy through fulfillment.
Jeremiah 28:9 applies the same test: a prophet's word must come true to be from the Lord, reinforcing Micaiah's criterion.
Micah 1:2 opens with 'Hear, all you peoples'—the exact phrase Micaiah uses, creating a direct linguistic parallel.
Proverbs 29:1 warns the stubbornly rebuked will be suddenly destroyed — Ahab's rejection of Micaiah's rebuke and his death perfectly illustrate this.
In 2 Kings 1:10, Elijah uses a conditional test ('If I be a man of God...') similar to Micaiah's self-test of prophetic validity.