Deuteronomy 9:8
Also in Horeb ye provoked the Lord to wrath, so that the Lord was angry with you to have destroyed you.
Cross-references
Deuteronomy 9:19 continues the same Horeb account, showing Moses’ intercession averted the destruction that verse 8 says was imminent.
Exodus 32:16 describes the tablets as God’s own work—the very tablets Moses shattered at Horeb, the event recalled in this verse.
Psalm 106:19-22 explicitly recounts the golden calf at Horeb—the same idolatry Moses recalls in this verse as provoking God’s wrath.
Ezekiel 20:13 recounts the same rebellion in the wilderness where God threatened to destroy them, directly paralleling this verse.
1 Kings 14:9 rebukes Jeroboam for making metal images and provoking God—mirroring the golden calf rebellion at Horeb referenced here.
Numbers 14:11 shows another instance of Israel’s unbelief and God’s anger—a different rebellion that parallels the Horeb incident here.
1 Kings 11:9 describes God’s anger at Solomon’s idolatry—a later echo of the pattern of provoking God seen at Horeb in this verse.
Ezra 9:14 fears that renewed disobedience will bring God’s consuming anger again—the same threat Moses recalled from Horeb in this verse.
Psalm 78:17 summarizes Israel's rebellion in the wilderness, echoing the Horeb incident where they provoked God's wrath described here.