Exodus 14:28
And the waters returned, and covered the chariots, and the horsemen, and all the host of Pharaoh that came into the sea after them; there remained not so much as one of them.
Cross-reference
Exodus 14:13 contains Moses' promise that the Egyptians would never be seen again, fulfilled in verse 28.
Exodus 15:10 poetically retells the drowning: God's breath brought the sea down, sinking the enemy like lead.
Exodus 15:5 poetically recounts the same event: 'the depths covered them; they sank like stone'—a direct citation of the drowning.
Exodus 15:19 repeats the event: 'horse and rider he has thrown into the sea'—another poetic retelling of the same victory.
Hebrews 11:29 cites this event as an act of faith: Israelites passed through on dry land, Egyptians drowned.
Habakkuk 3:13 describes God crushing the wicked to save His people, echoing the Exodus deliverance.
Habakkuk 3:8-10 poetically depicts God's power over the sea, likely alluding to the Red Sea destruction.
Psalm 136:15 directly states God swept Pharaoh's army into the Red Sea as part of His enduring love.
Psalm 106:9-11 explicitly rehearses the Red Sea crossing and the drowning of Israel's adversaries.
Psalm 78:53 summarizes that God led Israel safely while the sea overwhelmed their enemies.
Nehemiah 9:11 retells the miracle, contrasting Israel's safe passage with pursuers hurled into depths like a stone.
Deuteronomy 11:4 recounts the same event, emphasizing God overwhelming the Egyptian army in the Red Sea.
Psalm 77:19 describes God's path through the sea—an unseen but powerful deliverance, echoing this crossing.
Psalm 76:6 echoes this same event—God's rebuke leaves horse and chariot still—highlighting divine power over armies.
Psalm 74:13 poetically recalls God splitting the sea and crushing the sea monster—likely Pharaoh—connecting to this defeat of the Egyptian army.
Psalm 106:11 directly summarizes this verse—waters covered adversaries, not one survived—as a historical recital.
Joshua 24:7 summarizes God bringing the sea upon the Egyptians—a historical reference to the same event in a covenant speech.
Haggai 2:22 uses similar imagery of overthrowing chariots and riders—prophetic echo of God's defeat of Pharaoh's army.
Zechariah 10:11 references passing through the sea and drying up the Nile—a prophetic echo of this Exodus deliverance.
Mark 4:39 shows Jesus rebuking the sea—a typological echo of God's power over the waters in this Exodus event.
Psalm 33:16 says no king is saved by a great army—thematic parallel that human strength fails, as Egypt's army perished despite its might.