Exodus 14:29
But the children of Israel walked upon dry land in the midst of the sea; and the waters were a wall unto them on their right hand, and on their left.
Cross-reference
Exodus 14:22 recounts the same event—Israelites crossing on dry ground with walls of water—repeated here for emphasis.
Exodus 15:19 poetically restates the same event: Israelites walking on dry ground through the sea while waters returned on the Egyptians.
Joshua 3:16 describes a parallel miracle: the Jordan River stopping and Israelites crossing on dry ground, echoing the Red Sea event.
Job 38:8-11 describes God setting boundaries for the sea—echoing the 'wall of water' here, demonstrating divine control.
Psalm 66:6 directly recalls the Red Sea crossing: God turned the sea into dry land for Israel to pass through.
Psalm 77:19 poetically describes God's unseen path through the sea, echoing the crossing.
In Psalm 78:53, God led Israel safely through the sea while the waters overwhelmed their enemies.
Isaiah 43:2 promises God's presence through waters, echoing the Red Sea crossing as a model of deliverance.
Isaiah 51:10 explicitly recalls God drying up the sea to make a way for the redeemed, referencing Exodus 14.
Isaiah 63:12 recalls God's glorious arm dividing waters before Moses at the Red Sea, making His name renowned.
In Isaiah 63:13, this same crossing is recalled with imagery of God leading His people through the depths without stumbling.
Joshua 3:17 recounts the priests standing on dry ground in the Jordan, mirroring Israel's dry crossing of the Red Sea.
Joshua 4:22 explicitly echoes 'crossed on dry ground' as instruction for future generations, linking the Jordan crossing to the Exodus.
Psalm 136:13 directly praises God who divided the Red Sea, the same miraculous event described in this verse.
Isaiah 43:16 explicitly recalls God making a way through the sea and a path through mighty waters—the Exodus crossing.
In 1 Corinthians 10:1, Paul directly cites the crossing as a type of baptism for the Israelites.