Daniel 11:12
And when he hath taken away the multitude, his heart shall be lifted up; and he shall cast down many ten thousands: but he shall not be strengthened by it.
Cross-references
Daniel 5:20 directly shows how a lifted heart leads to deposition—same pattern as the king who is exalted but does not prevail.
Daniel 8:25 describes a king who magnifies himself in heart and is broken—same pride-before-fall pattern as here.
Deuteronomy 8:14 warns Israel against proud hearts that forget God—same 'heart lifted up' language as this king's pride.
2 Kings 14:10 warns Amaziah that his heart is lifted up after victory—identical situation to the king here who is exalted but will not prevail.
2 Chronicles 25:19 repeats the same warning to Amaziah: heart lifted up leads to fall—direct parallel to the king's exaltation here.
2 Chronicles 26:16 says Uzziah's heart was lifted up to his destruction—same pattern of pride after strength leading to downfall.
In 2 Chronicles 32:25, Hezekiah's heart is lifted up after God's favor, bringing wrath—mirroring the pride and consequence here.
Proverbs 16:18 directly states the principle: pride precedes destruction, summarizing the king's trajectory here.
Isaiah 10:7-12 shows the Assyrian king's arrogant boasting after conquest, which God punishes—same pattern of pride undone.
Ezekiel 28:2 rebukes the king of Tyre for his 'heart lifted up' and self-deification, echoing the proud king here.
Ezekiel 28:5 links pride to wealth; here the king's pride comes from military triumph—both lead to downfall.
Ezekiel 28:17 says 'thine heart was lifted up because of thy beauty' and God casts him down—same pride-fall logic.
Habakkuk 2:4-6 describes the proud soul not upright, and the arrogant Chaldean—matching the lifted heart here.
Acts 12:23 shows Herod struck down for not giving glory to God—direct parallel to the king not being strengthened here.
1 Timothy 3:6 warns against a novice being 'lifted up with pride' to fall—same phrase and warning as here.
In 1 Peter 5:5, God resists the proud — this principle explains why the king's lifted-up heart here leads to his weakness.