Deuteronomy 1:34
And the Lord heard the voice of your words, and was wroth, and sware, saying,
Cross-reference
Deuteronomy 2:14 records the fulfillment of the oath: 38 years until that generation died, exactly as God swore here.
Deuteronomy 2:15 continues the same narrative: God's hand against them until they were consumed — a direct continuation.
Numbers 14:22-30 is the original account of God's anger and oath — this verse summarizes that judgment.
Numbers 32:8-13 retells the same incident: the spies' report, God's anger, and the exclusion from the land.
Psalm 95:11 echoes God's oath, using 'my rest' as a parallel to the promised land, warning against unbelief.
Ezekiel 20:15 recounts God's oath, specifying the land as flowing with milk and honey, reinforcing the judgment.
Hebrews 3:8-11 quotes Psalm 95, warning believers not to harden hearts like that generation — applying the oath to the church.
Numbers 32:10 directly recounts the same oath, providing additional context about the tribes of Reuben and Gad.
Psalm 106:26 directly recalls God's oath to make them fall in the wilderness, echoing the judgment in Deuteronomy.
1 Corinthians 10:5 notes God's displeasure and their death in the wilderness, directly alluding to the oath's fulfillment.
Hebrews 3:11 quotes the oath from Psalm 95, applying it to the warning against unbelief in the NT context.
Hebrews 3:18 recalls God's oath that the disobedient would not enter His rest, directly referencing this event where God swore in anger.
Joshua 15:13 shows Caleb receiving land — a contrast to the oath of judgment, as Caleb was faithful and entered the land.
Psalm 95:8 warns against hardening hearts at Meribah, a separate rebellion but part of the same narrative of unbelief referenced in the oath.