Ezekiel 28:4
With thy wisdom and with thine understanding thou hast gotten thee riches, and hast gotten gold and silver into thy treasures:
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 29:3 condemns Pharaoh's self-glorification—parallel to the king of Tyre's boast of wisdom and wealth in 28:4.
Deuteronomy 8:18 reminds that God gives power to get wealth—contrasting with the king's boast that his own wisdom made him rich.
In Deuteronomy 8:18, wealth is credited to God's power—contrasting sharply with Tyre's claim that wisdom alone produced its riches.
Zechariah 9:2-4 directly echoes Tyre's wisdom and heaped silver, then pronounces God's judgment—same theme and target.
Psalm 49:6 describes those who trust in their riches—exactly the pride of Tyre's king, making this a direct parallel.
Zechariah 9:3 directly describes Tyre's heaped silver and gold — the same wealth that made the king proud in Ezekiel.
Proverbs 18:11 says a rich man's wealth is his imagined strong city—matching Tyre's false security in its treasures.
Proverbs 23:4 warns against toiling for wealth—exactly what Tyre did, making this a fitting caution.
Proverbs 23:5 notes wealth vanishes suddenly—contrasting with Tyre's confident hoarding, foreshadowing its loss.
Ecclesiastes 9:11 says wisdom doesn't guarantee riches—contradicting Tyre's belief that its wisdom earned its wealth.
Jeremiah 49:4 similarly rebukes trusting in treasures — both Tyre and Ammon boast in wealth thinking themselves secure.
Mark 10:24 warns wealth makes entering God's kingdom hard — contrasting Tyre's trust in riches for security.