Exodus 3:11
And Moses said unto God, Who am I, that I should go unto Pharaoh, and that I should bring forth the children of Israel out of Egypt?
Cross-reference
Exodus 4:10-13 continues Moses' objection with further excuses, showing his reluctance to the same call.
Exodus 6:12 repeats Moses' self-doubt about his speech, paralleling his 'who am I' response here.
In 1 Kings 3:7, Solomon echoes Moses' self-deprecation, calling himself a little child, expressing inadequacy for ruling God's people.
In Isaiah 6:5-8, Isaiah laments his unworthiness before God, then volunteers—a parallel call narrative to Moses' reluctance.
In Jeremiah 1:6, Jeremiah pleads his youth and inability to speak, mirroring Moses' 'Who am I?' at his commission.
In Acts 7:23-25, Moses earlier acted with self-assurance to deliver Israel, contrasting his later humble reluctance here.
In 2 Corinthians 2:16, Paul asks 'Who is sufficient?'—the same cry of inadequacy Moses voiced before God's calling.
In 2 Corinthians 3:5, Paul affirms sufficiency from God, directly answering Moses' question about his own adequacy.
In Judges 6:15, Gideon protests his weakness and low status, closely paralleling Moses' own sense of inadequacy at his calling.
In 2 Corinthians 12:9, Paul learns that God's power is perfected in weakness — the same principle God applies to Moses' inadequacy here.
2 Samuel 7:18 echoes David's 'Who am I?' before God, paralleling Moses' sense of inadequacy.
In 2 Chronicles 2:6, Solomon asks 'who is able to build a house for God?' — echoing Moses' sense of inadequacy before a divine task.