Deuteronomy 8:14

Then thine heart be lifted up, and thou forget the Lord thy God, which brought thee forth out of the land of Egypt, from the house of bondage;

Cross-reference

Deuteronomy 8:11 directly commands not to forget God, which is the very warning behind the pride in 8:14.

In Deuteronomy 17:20, the same phrase 'heart lifted up' warns the king against pride — reinforcing the danger of forgetting God.

Deuteronomy 32:18 accuses Israel of forgetting the God who gave them birth, directly reinforcing this warning.

Psalm 106:21 recounts Israel forgetting God who saved them from Egypt — the same sin warned against here.

In 1 Corinthians 4:8, Paul's sarcastic 'you have become rich' rebukes self-sufficiency — matching the warning against a lifted heart that forgets God.

In 1 Corinthians 4:7, Paul asks why boast as if not received — exposing the forgetfulness of God's provision that pride brings.

Jeremiah 2:6 laments Israel forgetting the LORD who brought them out of Egypt, echoing the warning here.

In 2 Chronicles 26:16, Uzziah's lifted heart led to his destruction — an example of the pride warned against here.

Job 8:13 Parallel

In Job 8:13, forgetting God is directly linked to the fate of the godless—echoing the same warning about pride and forgetfulness.

Psalm 10:4 Parallel

In Psalm 10:4, the wicked's pride leads to not seeking God—mirroring the pride that causes forgetting God in Deuteronomy.

Psalm 44:17 Contrast

In Psalm 44:17, the psalmist asserts they have not forgotten God despite suffering—a direct contrast to the forgetting warned against.

Exodus 13:3 Parallel

Exodus 13:3 commands remembering the exodus, while this verse warns against forgetting it — complementary.

In Isaiah 17:10, Israel is accused of forgetting the God of salvation—the same sin warned against in Deuteronomy.

Jeremiah 34:13 Historical context

In Jeremiah 34:13, God reminds Israel of the exodus from Egypt—the very event they are prone to forget in Deuteronomy.

In Ezekiel 28:2, pride of heart leads the king of Tyre to claim divinity—a heightened example of the pride warned against.

In Ezekiel 28:5, wealth gained by wisdom leads to pride—exactly the scenario described in Deuteronomy.

In Daniel 11:12, pride follows military victory—a different context but the same pattern of pride from success.

2 Kings 17:38 explicitly commands not to forget God's covenant, directly paralleling the warning.

In 2 Corinthians 12:7, Paul's thorn prevents conceit—showing a divine remedy for the pride that Deuteronomy warns about.

In Jeremiah 2:31, Israel declares freedom from God — echoing the forgetfulness warned against when hearts are lifted up.

2 Kings 14:10 rebukes Amaziah for arrogance after victory, mirroring the pride warned against here.

In 1 Timothy 3:6, the same warning against pride applies to new converts — like Israel, they risk forgetting God and falling.

2 Chronicles 25:19 rebukes Uzziah's pride after victory, similar to the heart-proud warning here.