Numbers 14:10

But all the congregation bade stone them with stones. And the glory of the Lord appeared in the tabernacle of the congregation before all the children of Israel.

Cross-reference

In Numbers 16:19, the congregation again assembles against Moses and Aaron, and the glory of the Lord appears—identical sequence.

In Numbers 16:42, after Korah’s rebellion, the congregation again confronts Moses and Aaron as the glory appears, repeating the pattern.

In Numbers 20:6, the people quarrel with Moses and Aaron, and the glory of the Lord appears again at the tent of meeting.

Exodus 16:7 Allusion

In Exodus 16:7, Moses tells the people they will see the glory of the Lord because of their grumbling, foreshadowing this same divine response.

In Exodus 16:10, the glory of the Lord appears in the cloud as the people grumble, exactly as it does here after the stoning threat.

Exodus 17:4 Parallel

In Exodus 17:4, Moses similarly cried out about the people being ready to stone him, showing a recurring threat against God's leader.

In 1 Samuel 30:6, David also faced stoning from his own men when they were bitter, mirroring the same leader-threatening pattern.

In Matthew 23:37, Jesus laments Jerusalem stoning prophets, echoing the same rejection of God's messengers seen here.

Acts 7:52 Allusion

In Acts 7:52, Stephen accuses Israel of persecuting and killing prophets, continuing the pattern of stoning God’s servants.

Acts 7:59 Typology

In Acts 7:59, Stephen is actually stoned, fulfilling the lethal threat made against Moses and Aaron here.

Deuteronomy 9:23 Historical context

Deuteronomy 9:23 recounts the same rebellion at Kadesh-barnea, directly referencing the people's refusal to go up after being sent.