Isaiah 37:11
Behold, thou hast heard what the kings of Assyria have done to all lands by destroying them utterly; and shalt thou be delivered?
Cross-reference
Isaiah 37:18 shows Hezekiah acknowledging the same destruction in prayer — not denying the boast but turning to God for deliverance.
Isaiah 37:19 explains why those nations fell — their gods were lifeless idols, contrasting with the living God of Israel.
Isaiah 10:7-14 reveals God's sovereignty: Assyria is His tool, yet the king boasts arrogantly — providing theological context for this challenge.
Isaiah 36:18-20 records the identical Assyrian claim that no god could deliver — the direct source of the boast repeated here.
Isaiah 36:4 opens Rabshakeh's speech questioning Hezekiah's trust — the same speech where 37:11 boasts of Assyria's conquests.
2 Kings 17:4-6 recounts Assyria's conquest of Israel — a concrete example of the destruction the boast refers to.
2 Kings 18:33-35 gives the same taunt from Rabshakeh — that no god has delivered from Assyria — exactly matching this boast.
2 Kings 18:34 lists specific conquered cities and their gods, detailing the boast summarized in this verse.
Zephaniah 3:6 declares God cuts off nations — contrasting with the Assyrian king's claim in 37:11 that he did it.