Exodus 16:7

And in the morning, then ye shall see the glory of the Lord; for that he heareth your murmurings against the Lord: and what are we, that ye murmur against us?

Cross-reference

Exodus 16:3 Parallel

In Exodus 16:3, the people's complaint about hunger sets up the context for God's response of providing manna and showing His glory.

Exodus 16:8 Parallel

In Exodus 16:8, Moses explains that the grumbling is against the LORD, reinforcing the point that seeing His glory comes after their complaint.

Exodus 16:10 Prophetic fulfillment

Exodus 16:10 shows the glory of the LORD appearing in the cloud, fulfilling the promise of seeing His glory.

Exodus 16:13 Prophetic fulfillment

Exodus 16:13 describes the fulfillment of the promise: quail and manna appear, showing the glory of the LORD.

Exodus 16:2 Parallel

In Exodus 16:2, the grumbling of the congregation is the immediate cause for the promise of seeing God's glory in verse 7.

Exodus 16:12 fulfills the promise of seeing God's glory by providing bread and meat, directly answering the grumbling.

Exodus 24:16 Related theme

Exodus 24:16 depicts the glory of the LORD dwelling on Sinai, a later manifestation of the same glory promised to the people here.

Exodus 40:34 Related theme

Exodus 40:34 records the glory of the LORD filling the tabernacle, a later fulfillment of His presence, echoing the promise here.

Numbers 14:10 Related theme

In Numbers 14:10, the glory of the LORD appears when the people threaten to stone the spies — a similar divine response to rebellion.

Numbers 16:42 Related theme

In Numbers 16:42, the glory of the LORD appears during Korah's rebellion, reinforcing the pattern of divine glory responding to grumbling.

In Numbers 16:11, Moses uses similar rhetoric — 'What is Aaron?' — echoing the question 'what are we?' from this verse.

Numbers 11:1 contrasts the response: here grumbling brings fire and judgment instead of provision.

Numbers 21:5 shows the same people later grumbling about the very manna God provided, revealing persistent ingratitude.

Luke 10:16 Parallel

Luke 10:16 teaches that rejecting Christ's messengers is rejecting Him and the Father – the same principle as grumbling against Moses being grumbling against God.

Philippians 2:14 commands believers to do all without grumbling – directly contrasting the Israelites' grumbling in Exodus 16:7.

Numbers 16:19 also shows the glory of the LORD appearing, but this time in judgment against rebellion.

Leviticus 9:6 Related theme

Leviticus 9:6 echoes the promise that the glory of the LORD will appear, now in the context of the tabernacle dedication.

Numbers 20:2 repeats the pattern: the people grumble against Moses and Aaron when there is no water.

Isaiah 40:5 Related theme

In Isaiah 40:5, the glory of the LORD is revealed to all flesh, echoing the promise of seeing His glory here.

Luke 2:9 Allusion

Luke 2:9 echoes 'glory of the Lord' as a radiant sign to shepherds, a New Testament theophany tied to Jesus' birth.