Deuteronomy 9:19
For I was afraid of the anger and hot displeasure, wherewith the Lord was wroth against you to destroy you. But the Lord hearkened unto me at that time also.
Cross-reference
Deut 9:8 describes the same event: Israel provoked the Lord at Horeb, causing His anger to destroy them—the source of Moses' fear.
Deut 10:10 reiterates that God listened to Moses and chose not to destroy Israel, directly confirming the outcome of Deut 9:19.
Ex 32:10 records God's threat to consume Israel, which Moses feared in Deut 9:19. The cross-reference shows the specific anger Moses appealed to.
Ex 32:11 is Moses' plea that changed God's mind; Deut 9:19 says God listened, so this reveals the prayer that succeeded.
Ex 32:14 states the Lord relented from the harm He intended, the direct result of Moses’ intercession that Deut 9:19 says was heard.
Psalm 99:6 includes Moses among those who called on God and were answered — mirroring God's response to Moses' intercession here.
Psalm 106:23 directly recounts Moses standing in the breach to turn away God's wrath — the same golden calf event described here.
Amos 7:3 shows the Lord relenting after intercession — the same pattern of divine response seen after Moses' prayer here.
Amos 7:6 records God relenting again after Amos's prayer — mirroring the repeated effectiveness of Moses' intercession.
Exodus 32:31 is Moses’ actual prayer during the golden calf incident — the same event Moses recalls here.
Psalm 99:8 recalls God as 'a forgiving God to them, but an avenger of their wrongdoings' — directly referencing the event where Moses interceded and God relented.
Numbers 11:2 shows Moses praying and God stopping a fire — a different event but the same pattern of intercession and divine relenting.
Ezekiel 11:13 shows Ezekiel crying out 'Will you make a full end?' — similar to Moses' fear of destruction in Deut 9:19. Both prophets intercede.
Amos 7:2 records a prophet interceding for forgiveness — a parallel to Moses' plea for Israel in this passage.
Amos 7:5 is another intercessory plea by Amos, echoing Moses' role of standing before God for Israel.
James 5:16 declares the powerful effect of a righteous person's prayer — exemplified by Moses here whose prayer moved God.