2 Kings 18:25

Am I now come up without the Lord against this place to destroy it? The Lord said to me, Go up against this land, and destroy it.

Cross-reference

2 Kings 19:6, Isaiah says the LORD has not sent Sennacherib, directly refuting Rabshakeh's claim in v25.

2 Kings 19:22-37 shows God judging Assyria for blasphemy, disproving Rabshakeh's claim that the LORD sent him.

2 Kings 24:3 Historical context

2 Kings 24:3 confirms that God used foreign nations to punish Judah, validating the Rabshakeh's claim of divine commission.

Isaiah 10:5 Allusion

Isaiah 10:5 says Assyria is God's rod of anger, affirming that the LORD did use them, but condemns their arrogance.

Isaiah 10:6 Allusion

Isaiah 10:6 states God sends Assyria against a godless nation, confirming Rabshakeh's claim that the LORD sent him (though with a different purpose).

John 19:11 Parallel

John 19:11 affirms that all authority is from above, which the Rabshakeh claims but misuses, highlighting God's sovereignty.

Isaiah 36:10 records the identical claim by the Rabshakeh in the parallel historical account of the same event.

In 2 Samuel 16:10, David accepts that God may have sent Shimei, paralleling the Rabshakeh's claim that God sent him.

1 Kings 13:18, an old prophet falsely claims divine command, paralleling Rabshakeh's false claim that the LORD sent him.

2 Chronicles 35:21, Pharaoh Neco claims God commanded him to act, similar to Rabshakeh's claim of divine commission.