Exodus 14:17
And I, behold, I will harden the hearts of the Egyptians, and they shall follow them: and I will get me honour upon Pharaoh, and upon all his host, upon his chariots, and upon his horsemen.
Cross-reference
Exodus 14:18 immediately explains the purpose of the hardening: that Egyptians know the Lord when He gets glory.
Exodus 14:4 states the same plan: God hardening Pharaoh's heart to pursue Israel so God gets glory — a direct parallel within the same narrative.
Exodus 14:8 describes the same hardening—the LORD hardened Pharaoh's heart, leading to the pursuit—direct narrative parallel.
Exodus 14:23 records the Egyptians pursuing into the sea, the direct result of the hardening here.
Exodus 7:3 is God's initial promise to harden Pharaoh's heart—same theme explicitly stated earlier.
Exodus 7:13 shows the first fulfillment—Pharaoh's heart hardened—reinforcing the pattern in 14:17.
Exodus 15:1 celebrates God's triumph over horse and rider, the glory God gained in this verse.
Exodus 10:1 has God hardening Pharaoh's heart to show signs, closely parallel to this verse's hardening for glory.
Exodus 9:16 states God raised Pharaoh to show His power, same purpose as hardening here to get glory.
Exodus 4:23 records God's prior warning to Pharaoh about the firstborn—part of the same unfolding judgment sequence.
Deuteronomy 32:39 declares God's sole power to kill and make alive — Exodus 14:17 exemplifies this as God destroys the Egyptian army and saves Israel.
1 Samuel 6:6 warns against hardening hearts like the Egyptians, directly referencing the Exodus event here.
Isaiah 63:12 looks back at this very event—God's glorious arm dividing waters to make for himself an everlasting name.
Ezekiel 28:22 repeats the same divine declaration—'I will get glory'—applying God's judgment to Sidon as here to Egypt.
Haggai 2:22 echoes the overthrow of chariots and riders—the same image of God destroying military power as at the Red Sea.
Romans 9:17 quotes Exodus 9:16 on God raising Pharaoh to show His power—directly related to God getting glory over Pharaoh here.
John 12:40 cites Isaiah 6:10 on hardening hearts—the same divine hardening seen in Pharaoh here, now applied to Jesus' opponents.
Isaiah 6:10 describes God hardening hearts—a parallel to the hardening of Pharaoh's heart here, though for a different purpose.
Romans 2:5 describes a hard heart storing up wrath—contrast to Pharaoh's heart hardened by God here, yet both lead to judgment.