Exodus 10:14
And the locusts went up over all the land of Egypt, and rested in all the coasts of Egypt: very grievous were they; before them there were no such locusts as they, neither after them shall be such.
Cross-reference
In Exodus 10:5, Moses warned Pharaoh that locusts would cover the land and devour everything left by the hail — here that prediction is fulfilled.
Exodus 10:6 predicts the unprecedented filling of houses and land by locusts — this verse records the actual fulfillment of that warning.
Deuteronomy 28:42 warns that locusts will consume crops as a covenant curse — directly echoing the plague of locusts on Egypt.
Psalm 78:46 recounts the locust plague on Egypt, explicitly referring to the same event — God's judgment on Pharaoh.
Psalm 105:34 directly recounts the locust plague — God spoke and locusts came, confirming the event as divine judgment.
Psalm 105:35 poetically retells the same locust plague, describing how they consumed all vegetation in Egypt — it's a historical echo of this event.
Joel 2:2 explicitly echoes the 'none like it before or after' phrase from this verse, applying it to a future locust invasion — a direct literary parallel.
Deuteronomy 28:38 warns that locusts will devour crops as a covenant curse — the same instrument of judgment used against Egypt appears here as a threat to Israel.
Joel 1:2-4 describes a locust plague as divine judgment on Israel, using similar language of devastation — it parallels the historical pattern of God's judgment through locusts.
Revelation 9:3-7 uses locusts as a symbol of end-times judgment, echoing the plague on Egypt but transforming them into demonic creatures with scorpion stings.
1 Kings 8:37 includes locusts in a list of potential judgments — recalling the plague as a possible divine punishment.