2 Chronicles 32:14
Who was there among all the gods of those nations that my fathers utterly destroyed, that could deliver his people out of mine hand, that your God should be able to deliver you out of mine hand?
Cross-reference
Exodus 15:9-11 contrasts the enemy's boast with God's incomparability—directly refuting Sennacherib's claim that no god can deliver.
Isaiah 10:12 pronounces God's punishment on Assyria's arrogant boast—the divine response to the very words in 2 Chronicles.
Isaiah 42:8 declares God's glory is given to no other—a direct counter to Sennacherib's blasphemous equation of Yahweh with idols.
2 Kings 18:19 records the Rabshakeh's challenge about trust—another part of the same speech, adding context to the boast in 2 Chronicles.
2 Kings 18:33 asks the exact same question about gods delivering lands—a verbatim parallel account of Sennacherib's boast.
2 Kings 19:11 reports the same Assyrian boast about destroying nations, directly paralleling this verse.
2 Kings 19:37 records Sennacherib's assassination while worshiping his god—ironically showing his god could not save him.
Isaiah 36:4 is the parallel version of the same Assyrian envoy's taunt, directly matching this verse.
Isaiah 37:38 describes Sennacherib's death while worshiping his god—a direct answer to his boast that no god could deliver.
Isaiah 10:11 shows Assyria's arrogance against Jerusalem as it boasted against Samaria—same mindset of treating Yahweh like other gods.
Exodus 14:3 records Pharaoh's mistaken confidence that Israel was trapped—a similar underestimation of God's power by an enemy.