2 Peter 2:13
And shall receive the reward of unrighteousness, as they that count it pleasure to riot in the day time. Spots they are and blemishes, sporting themselves with their own deceivings while they feast with you;
Cross-reference
Isaiah 3:11 declares the wicked will be repaid for their deeds—here false teachers receive harm as their wages.
In Jude 1:12-16, the same false teachers are described as feasting deceptively and condemned as blots and blemishes, echoing Peter's language.
Hebrews 2:2 states every transgression received just retribution—here false teachers receive their wages of wrongdoing.
Philippians 3:19 describes enemies whose god is their belly and end is destruction—here false teachers revel in pleasures.
Ephesians 5:27 presents the church spotless and without blemish, contrasting the false teachers who are blemishes in the fellowship.
Romans 13:13 contrasts the false teachers' daytime reveling by exhorting believers to walk properly, avoiding orgies and drunkenness.
Romans 2:9 pronounces tribulation on evildoers—here false teachers encounter harm as their due.
Romans 2:8 describes wrath against those who obey unrighteousness—here false teachers suffer wrong as wage.
In Luke 12:45, a servant beats others and gets drunk — a clear parallel to the reveling and abusive behavior of false teachers here.
In Romans 6:13, Paul commands not to offer yourself to sin — the exact opposite of what the false teachers do here.
In Matthew 24:49, the evil servant eats and drinks with drunkards — directly mirroring the false teachers' carousing and feasting described here.
In 1 Corinthians 11:21, some get drunk at the Lord's Supper — a disorderly feast paralleling the carousing false teachers indulge in here.
In 2 Corinthians 11:15, false apostles masquerade as righteous but face judgment — echoing the hypocrisy and punishment of false teachers here.
In Ephesians 4:22, believers are told to put off the old self corrupted by deceitful desires — the false teachers here embody that old self instead.
Ezekiel 34:8 indicts shepherds who feed themselves instead of the flock, exactly the selfish revelry of false teachers here.
Jeremiah 23:26 condemns prophets who prophesy lies from their own hearts—directly parallel to false teachers who deceive while reveling.
In 2 Thessalonians 2:12, those who delight in wickedness are condemned — just as the false teachers reveling in sin face judgment here.
Proverbs 26:19 describes a deceiver who says 'I was only joking'—directly reflecting false teachers who revel in their deceptions.
1 Thessalonians 5:8 calls believers to be sober as children of the day, contrasting the false teachers who abuse the daytime for revelry.
1 Corinthians 11:20-21 condemns drunkenness at the Lord's supper, paralleling the false teachers' inappropriate reveling during love feasts.
1 Thessalonians 5:7 associates drunkenness with night, highlighting the shamelessness of the daytime revelry in 2 Peter 2:13.
Isaiah 57:4 mocks those who stick out their tongues in scorn, similar to the insolent attitude of false teachers described here.
1 Peter 4:4 describes unbelievers maligning believers who avoid debauchery, paralleling the false teachers' reveling that marks them as blots.
In Luke 15:13, the prodigal son squanders his wealth in wild living — a similar pattern of dissolute pleasure to the false teachers' revelry here.