Ezekiel 20:3
Son of man, speak unto the elders of Israel, and say unto them, Thus saith the Lord God; Are ye come to enquire of me? As I live, saith the Lord God, I will not be enquired of by you.
Cross-reference
In Ezekiel 14:3, the same elders with idols in their hearts ask to inquire of God, and He responds with the same rhetorical refusal.
Ezekiel 14:4 expands the principle: God will answer idolatrous inquirers according to their idolatry, showing His consistency in dealing with hidden sin.
Ezekiel 14:7 extends the same warning to foreigners who separate from God and still seek to inquire — God will answer them Himself.
Ezekiel 14:8 adds the consequence: God sets His face against such people, making them a sign and removing them — the judgment following refused inquiry.
Ezekiel 36:37 offers a stark contrast — God will let Israel ask in restoration, opposite of the refusal here.
In 1 Samuel 28:6, Saul inquires but God does not answer him — a historical example of God refusing to respond to a disobedient king.
Psalm 50:15-21 contrasts God's promise to answer the faithful with His rebuke of the wicked who recite laws but hate instruction — parallel to rejecting inquiry from idolaters.
Proverbs 28:9 says that even the prayers of someone who ignores God's instruction are detestable — echoing God's refusal to hear the inquiring elders.
Isaiah 1:12 rebukes Israel for trampling God's courts with empty worship — echoing God's refusal of the elders' inquiry there.
Isaiah 1:15 shows God hiding His eyes from prayers when hands are full of blood — parallel to God not letting idolatrous elders inquire of Him.
1 Samuel 14:37 directly parallels — God also refuses to answer Saul's inquiry, showing a pattern.
Zechariah 7:13 echoes God's refusal to hear when they call, matching God's refusal to be inquired of here.
2 Samuel 22:42 describes enemies crying to the Lord but He does not answer — same theme of unanswered prayer.
Micah 3:7 parallels God refusing to answer, as seers are confounded with no answer from God.