Exodus 14:25
And took off their chariot wheels, that they drave them heavily: so that the Egyptians said, Let us flee from the face of Israel; for the Lord fighteth for them against the Egyptians.
Cross-reference
Exodus 14:24 describes the LORD troubling the Egyptian army, which directly causes the wheels to come off in this verse.
Deuteronomy 3:22 repeats the assurance that God fights for Israel — confirmed here when the Egyptians themselves acknowledge it.
Judges 4:15 describes the LORD routing Sisera's chariots, just as He disabled the Egyptian chariots here.
1 Samuel 4:8 explicitly recalls the plagues in Egypt, showing later enemies remembered this event and feared Israel's God.
Psalm 76:6 directly references the stunned horses and riders, recalling God's rebuke of Egypt.
Deuteronomy 1:30 reminds Israel that God fights for them, using the Red Sea deliverance as the prime example of this truth.
Deuteronomy 32:31 states that even enemies acknowledge Israel's God is unique, as the Egyptians do here saying 'the LORD fights for them'.
Joshua 10:42 uses the same phrase 'the LORD fought for Israel' to summarize the conquest, echoing the Egyptians' confession.
Isaiah 10:26 explicitly mentions God raising his staff over waters as in Egypt, directly referencing this Exodus event.
Psalm 106:22 recalls the awesome deeds at the Red Sea, directly referencing this same event of God fighting for Israel.
2 Chronicles 20:17 tells Israel to stand still and see God's salvation—the same principle demonstrated when God fought for Israel at the Red Sea.
In Nehemiah 4:20, the rallying cry 'Our God will fight for us' echoes the same divine intervention as here when the Egyptians recognize the LORD fighting for Israel.
Psalm 35:1 calls on God to fight, directly echoing the theme of divine combat witnessed by the Egyptians here.
Psalm 46:9 speaks of God breaking chariots generally, reflecting the same divine power over war machines.
2 Chronicles 14:12 recounts God smiting the Ethiopians causing them to flee, paralleling God's intervention here that made the Egyptians flee.
1 Samuel 4:7 shows Philistines recognizing God's presence, mirroring the Egyptians' cry—both enemies acknowledge divine intervention.
Jeremiah 51:21 shows God breaking chariots through Babylon — a parallel display of divine power over military might seen here.
Psalm 68:12 celebrates kings fleeing in battle — reinforcing the theme of enemies scattering before God's power seen here.