Ezekiel 28:3
Behold, thou art wiser than Daniel; there is no secret that they can hide from thee:
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 28:15 describes the king's original blamelessness before sin—complementing the wisdom claim and showing his exalted start.
Ezekiel 14:14 lists Daniel as a righteous man—reinforcing that Daniel is the standard of wisdom the king of Tyre claims to exceed.
Ezekiel 27:3 records Tyre's boast of perfect beauty—showing the same pride in appearance that 28:3 shows in wisdom.
1 Kings 10:3 says nothing was hidden from Solomon — the same phrase 'no secret hidden' used for the king of Tyre. Strong verbal parallel.
Daniel 2:22 declares God reveals deep and hidden things — directly opposing the king's claim that no secret is hidden from him.
Daniel 2:47 has Nebuchadnezzar proclaim God as revealer of mysteries — contrasting with the king of Tyre's self-attributed wisdom.
Daniel 5:11 affirms Daniel's wisdom came from God — the prince's claim to surpass Daniel is false self-deification.
Daniel 5:12 emphasizes Daniel's God-given insight — opposing the prince's arrogant assertion of superior wisdom.
Daniel 1:6 introduces Daniel himself—the very person the king of Tyre is compared to as a benchmark of wisdom.
Daniel 1:17 shows Daniel's wisdom came from God—contrasting with the king's self-proclaimed, prideful wisdom in 28:3.
Daniel 4:9 says 'no mystery is too difficult' for Daniel—mirroring the claim in 28:3 that no secret is hidden from the king.
Proverbs 28:11 warns against being wise in one's own eyes—echoing the king of Tyre's ironic boast of surpassing Daniel in wisdom.