Exodus 12:23
For the Lord will pass through to smite the Egyptians; and when he seeth the blood upon the lintel, and on the two side posts, the Lord will pass over the door, and will not suffer the destroyer to come in unto your houses to smite you.
Cross-reference
Exodus 12:12 records the Lord's promise to strike Egypt—the same event the destroyer executes in verse 23.
Exodus 12:13 gives the promise that the blood will be a sign for protection—verse 23 describes how the Lord acts on that sign.
Exodus 12:7 commands the blood application on doorposts — the protective mark that causes the destroyer to pass over.
Exodus 12:27 defines the Passover as the Lord's passing over — the very act described in this verse.
Exodus 11:4 foretells the Lord's midnight passage through Egypt — the very event described here.
Ezekiel 9:4 instructs marking the faithful for protection before judgment—a parallel to the blood mark on doorposts.
Ezekiel 9:6 commands the destroyers to spare only those with the mark—directly mirroring the Passover protection.
1 Corinthians 10:10 references 'the Destroyer' who destroyed grumbling Israelites—the same figure from the Passover event.
Hebrews 11:28 explicitly recalls the Passover and the Destroyer—a New Testament commentary on this event.
Isaiah 26:20 calls God's people to hide indoors until judgment passes — echoing the Passover command to stay inside the blood-marked houses.
2 Samuel 24:16 also features a destroying angel stopped by God's command—a parallel to the destroyer being restrained from entering.
Amos 5:17 uses the same 'pass through' imagery for God's judgment, here against Israel, echoing the Passover judgment on Egypt.
Isaiah 37:36 describes an angel striking the Assyrians—like the destroyer in Exodus, an agent of divine judgment.
Acts 12:23 shows an angel striking the proud Herod, a similar divine judgment that parallels the destroyer striking Egypt in the Passover.