Exodus 7:5
And the Egyptians shall know that I am the Lord, when I stretch forth mine hand upon Egypt, and bring out the children of Israel from among them.
Cross-reference
Exodus 7:17 uses the same 'know that I am the LORD' formula as the purpose of the first plague, directly parallel.
Exodus 8:10 echoes the theme with 'know that there is no one like the LORD' during the plague of frogs, reinforcing God's self-revelation.
Exodus 8:22 repeats the 'know that I am the LORD' phrase, linking the plague of flies to the same purpose of divine revelation.
Exodus 14:4 restates the same goal — Egyptians will know the LORD — now through the Red Sea deliverance.
Exodus 14:18 again uses 'know that I am the LORD' as the outcome of judgment on Pharaoh at the sea.
In Exodus 3:20, God first promised to stretch out His hand; here He begins fulfilling that promise with the plagues.
In Exodus 12:17, the exodus is accomplished—confirming the deliverance that would make Egypt know the LORD as declared here.
Ezekiel 39:7 concludes with 'know that I am the LORD' as God makes His holy name known through judgment.
Ezekiel 36:23 uses the same 'know that I am the LORD' declaration, now tied to vindicating God's name among nations.
Ezekiel 25:17 explicitly uses 'know that I am the LORD' in a judgment context against Philistines, mirroring Exodus.
Ezekiel 28:22 repeats the formula 'know that I am the LORD' when God judges Sidon, continuing the same pattern.
In Ezekiel 6:7, the same 'you shall know that I am the LORD' formula is used in judgment against Israel—reinforcing the theme.
In Ezekiel 32:15, God again declares Egypt will know He is the LORD through desolation—a later prophecy echoing the same promise.
In 1 Kings 20:28, the same 'you shall know that I am the LORD' formula is used in judgment against Syria—echoing the pattern from the exodus.
In 1 Samuel 4:8, the Philistines recall the plagues on Egypt—showing that the knowledge of God's power spread beyond Egypt.
In Psalm 79:10, the psalmist asks God to make Himself known among nations through vengeance, similar to the judgment on Egypt here.
In Ezekiel 39:22, the same 'know that I am the LORD' formula applies to Israel after judgment—showing God's self-revelation to His people.