2 Chronicles 18:17
And the king of Israel said to Jehoshaphat, Did I not tell thee that he would not prophesy good unto me, but evil?
Cross-references
2 Chronicles 18:7 records the king's identical complaint about Micaiah — verse 17 repeats it verbatim, showing the king's fixed attitude.
2 Chronicles 18:22 explains that God put a lying spirit in Ahab's prophets — the king's complaint is answered by this divine deception.
1 Kings 22:18 is the parallel account's exact same line — the king's complaint against Micaiah is preserved in both histories.
1 Kings 21:20 has Ahab call Elijah 'my enemy' — the same hostility toward a prophet who speaks evil about him, mirroring his view of Micaiah.
1 Kings 22:17 records the vision of sheep without a shepherd that the king is rejecting — it supplies the prophecy behind his complaint.
Proverbs 29:1 warns that stubborn rejection of reproof leads to sudden ruin — Ahab's dismissal of Micaiah exemplifies this stiff-necked attitude.
Jeremiah 43:2 shows leaders accusing Jeremiah of lying — like Ahab, they dismiss a true prophet's message as false or evil.