Exodus 14:14

The Lord shall fight for you, and ye shall hold your peace.

Cross-reference

Exodus 14:25 confirms God fights for Israel as the Egyptians realize 'the LORD is fighting for them' — fulfilling the promise.

Exodus 15:3 Parallel

Exodus 15:3 declares 'The LORD is a warrior,' poetically summing up that God fought for Israel.

Joshua 23:10 repeats the promise that the LORD fights for Israel, now as the basis for victory over many enemies.

Isaiah 30:15 echoes this call to quiet trust — 'in quietness and trust shall be your strength' — as God's deliverance comes through stillness, not striving.

Nehemiah 4:20 boldly declares 'Our God will fight for us,' directly recalling the same assurance given to Moses at the sea.

2 Chronicles 20:29 reports that nations feared when they heard the LORD had fought — the outcome promised at the Red Sea.

2 Chronicles 20:17 directly commands 'stand still and see the salvation of the LORD,' echoing the same quiet trust and divine warfare.

Joshua 23:3 Allusion

Joshua 23:3 reminds Israel that the LORD fought for them against the nations, mirroring the promise given at the Red Sea.

Joshua 10:42 directly echoes that the LORD fought for Israel, using the same divine-warrior language as at the Red Sea.

Joshua 10:14 explicitly states 'the LORD was fighting for Israel,' confirming the promise in a later victory.

Deuteronomy 20:4 assures that God goes with Israel to fight for them, applying the same promise to new situations.

Deuteronomy 3:22 repeats the command not to fear because God himself fights, directly echoing Exodus 14:14.

Deuteronomy 1:30 recalls that God fought for Israel in Egypt, reminding them of this same promise for future battles.

Judges 7:21 Parallel

Judges 7:21 parallels this — Israel stands still while God causes the enemy to flee, just as here they are to be silent while God fights.

2 Chronicles 20:15 echoes this exactly — 'the battle is not yours but God's' — a direct parallel to the LORD fighting for His people.

Isaiah 7:4 Parallel

Isaiah 7:4 commands 'be quiet, do not fear' — directly parallel to the call to be silent and trust God's deliverance here.

Joshua 10:10 Historical context

Joshua 10:10 shows God fighting for Israel at Gibeon, a historical example of the principle in action.

Habakkuk 3:13 recalls God going out to save His people and crush the wicked — the same divine warrior theme as God fighting for Israel here.

Psalm 83:1 Contrast

Psalm 83:1 pleads for God not to be silent — opposite of Israel's command to be silent here, yet both concern God's fighting for His people.

Judges 5:20 Parallel

Judges 5:20 shows the stars fighting for Israel — a poetic expansion of the LORD fighting through creation, as at the sea.