2 Kings 19:10

Thus shall ye speak to Hezekiah king of Judah, saying, Let not thy God in whom thou trustest deceive thee, saying, Jerusalem shall not be delivered into the hand of the king of Assyria.

Cross-reference

In 2 Kings 19:37, Sennacherib is assassinated, fulfilling God's judgment and contrasting his boastful threat.

2 Kings 18:5 says Hezekiah trusted God — contrasting with Sennacherib's warning not to trust.

In 2 Kings 18:30, Rabshakeh gives the same warning not to trust the LORD's deliverance, repeating the Assyrian king's deceptive claim.

2 Kings 18:19 Historical context

2 Kings 18:19 begins Rabshakeh's challenge to Hezekiah's trust, directly leading to this later message in the same narrative.

In 2 Chronicles 32:15-19, Sennacherib's officials speak against God and Hezekiah, echoing the same boast and threat.

Isaiah 37:10-14 is the parallel account of this same event, with identical wording about not being deceived.

2 Chronicles 32:11 repeats the same false claim: Hezekiah is misleading you. It parallels the Assyrian king's accusation.

Isaiah 10:8 Parallel

In Isaiah 10:8, the Assyrian king boasts that his commanders are kings—the same arrogant self-reliance seen in Sennacherib's message here.

Isaiah 36:4 Parallel

In Isaiah 36:4, the Rabshakeh asks Hezekiah the same question about trust—this is the parallel account of Sennacherib's taunt.

In Isaiah 36:14, the warning not to let Hezekiah deceive you mirrors this verse directly—same event, same message.

Psalm 115:2 Related theme

Psalm 115:2 asks why nations mock God's power. The Assyrian king's words here are a direct instance of such mocking.