Exodus 19:4
Ye have seen what I did unto the Egyptians, and how I bare you on eagles’ wings, and brought you unto myself.
Cross-references
Exodus 14:31 directly describes the people seeing God's power against Egypt, exactly what Exodus 19:4 refers to.
Deuteronomy 29:2 repeats the same reminder of God's acts in Egypt, directly mirroring Exodus 19:4.
Deuteronomy 32:11 directly uses the eagle imagery of God carrying Israel on its pinions, paralleling Exodus 19:4.
Isaiah 63:9 echoes the same exodus motif of God carrying His people in distress, describing His love and redemption.
Deuteronomy 1:31 uses a father carrying his son as a parallel image to God carrying Israel on eagles’ wings.
Ezekiel 20:5 directly references God’s choice of Israel in Egypt — the same historical moment as the exodus deliverance.
Hosea 11:3 uses parental imagery — God teaching Ephraim to walk — parallels the bearing on eagles' wings.
Hebrews 8:9 recalls the exodus covenant, noting Israel broke it — contrasting God's faithful deliverance with their disobedience.
Deuteronomy 4:9 commands not to forget what their eyes saw, echoing Exodus 19:4's reminder of God's deeds.
Joshua 24:17 recounts the same exodus deliverance from Egypt, though without the specific eagle imagery.
Isaiah 48:20 calls for a new exodus from Babylon — echoing the redemption from Egypt described here.
Hebrews 3:9 recalls the wilderness testing after the exodus — a later reflection on the same generation's response to God's deliverance.
Revelation 12:14 reuses eagle wings for protection in the wilderness, prefigured by God carrying Israel in Exodus.
1 Chronicles 17:21 refers to God redeeming Israel from Egypt, the same event described in Exodus 19:4.
Isaiah 46:3 uses the same "carried from birth" imagery — a parallel to being borne on eagles' wings.
Ezekiel 16:8 describes God’s covenant with Israel using wedding imagery — echoes the covenant relationship initiated at Sinai.