Isaiah 36:13
Then Rabshakeh stood, and cried with a loud voice in the Jews’ language, and said, Hear ye the words of the great king, the king of Assyria.
Cross-reference
Isaiah 36:4 records the same speech—the Rabshakeh's boast to Hezekiah—showing the identical message of Assyrian might.
Isaiah 8:7 prophesied the Assyrian invasion as God's instrument; here the Rabshakeh embodies that flood of pride.
Isaiah 10:8-13 reveals the Assyrian king's arrogant self-reliance, which the Rabshakeh echoes verbatim in his boast.
1 Samuel 17:8-11 shows Goliath taunting Israel — a parallel to Rabshakeh's loud challenge to Jerusalem.
2 Kings 18:28-32 is the parallel account of the same speech, with identical content.
2 Chronicles 32:18 describes the same taunting in the Judahite language — a parallel account of this incident.
Ezekiel 31 compares Assyria to a proud cedar that falls—contrasting the Rabshakeh's boast here with future judgment.
Daniel 4:37 shows Nebuchadnezzar humbling himself after pride—opposite to the Rabshakeh's arrogance here.