2 Kings 17:18
Therefore the Lord was very angry with Israel, and removed them out of his sight: there was none left but the tribe of Judah only.
Cross-reference
2 Kings 13:23 shows God's earlier mercy — contrasting with the judgment that ultimately removed Israel from His sight.
In 2 Kings 23:27, God says he will remove Judah as he removed Israel — the same judgment pattern applied later.
Deuteronomy 29:20-28 warns of God's anger and exile for covenant-breaking, fulfilled here in Israel's removal.
Deuteronomy 32:21-26 prophesies God's scattering of Israel for idolatry, directly fulfilled in this verse.
In 1 Kings 11:13, God promised to leave one tribe to David's line; here only Judah remains, showing that promise kept.
1 Kings 11:32 repeats the promise that one tribe remains for David; here that tribe is Judah after Israel's exile.
1 Kings 11:32 again states the one-tribe promise; Judah's survival after Israel's removal fulfills it.
Hosea 9:3 predicts Israel will not stay in the land but go to Assyria — directly fulfilled in this verse.
Jeremiah 15:1 says even Moses and Samuel cannot intercede for Judah's exile; it echoes the irreversibility of judgment seen here.
Deuteronomy 29:28 prophesied exile for covenant disobedience; here that curse is executed on the northern kingdom.
Hosea 13:16 pronounces judgment on Samaria for rebellion, fulfilling the removal of Israel described in 2 Kings 17:18.
Hosea 9:12 declares 'woe when I depart from them' — directly matching God's removal of Israel from His presence in 2 Kings 17:18.
Ezekiel 23:13 describes Judah (Oholibah) imitating Israel's (Oholah) defilement, directly paralleling Judah following Israel's practices in 2 Kings 17:19.
Jeremiah 7:15 directly references the casting out of Ephraim as an example, warning Judah of the same fate.
2 Chronicles 6:36 echoes Solomon's prayer about captivity for sin, fulfilled here in Israel's removal from the land.
1 Kings 8:46 is Solomon's prayer acknowledging exile as judgment for sin; this verse records that judgment on Israel.
Daniel 9:11 confesses that all Israel transgressed, bringing the curse of exile — the same removal from God's presence described here.
Hosea 4:15 warns Judah not to follow Israel's idolatry — a warning that was ignored, as 2 Kings 17:19 records Judah doing exactly that.
Joshua 23:15 says all good promises will become curses if they disobey; the exile is that curse.
Zechariah 8:13 recalls that Israel and Judah became a curse among nations — the same exile and removal referenced here.