Numbers 14:22
Because all those men which have seen my glory, and my miracles, which I did in Egypt and in the wilderness, and have tempted me now these ten times, and have not hearkened to my voice;
Cross-reference
Numbers 14:11 shows God's immediate reaction: 'How long will they not believe me?' — the same unbelief and testing referenced here.
Hebrews 3:18 clarifies that the oath to not enter rest was for those who did not believe — the very testing described here.
Exodus 17:2 records one of the ten tests — the people tempting the Lord at Massah — providing a specific example of the pattern.
Hebrews 3:17 asks 'with whom was God grieved forty years?' — pointing to the same generation that fell in the wilderness.
Hebrews 3:9 quotes Psalm 95:9, describing the same wilderness testing: 'your fathers put Me to the test, saw My works forty years'.
1 Corinthians 10:9 warns believers not to test Christ, referencing Israel's wilderness testing that led to destruction by serpents.
Psalm 106:26 recalls God's sworn punishment — overthrowing them in the wilderness — as the consequence of their testing.
Psalm 106:14 says they 'tempted God in the desert' — matching the ten-time testing mentioned here.
Psalm 95:9-11 directly cites this wilderness testing, warning later generations not to harden hearts as they did.
Deuteronomy 1:31-35 recounts the same event, emphasizing God's fatherly care and their unbelief, leading to the oath excluding that generation.
Psalm 95:8 warns against hardening hearts as at Meribah, referencing the same testing and disobedience seen in this verse.
Psalm 106:25 recalls Israel grumbling and not listening to the Lord's voice, directly paralleling the disobedience described here.
In Psalm 78:41, this same wilderness generation is described as repeatedly tempting and grieving God, echoing the testing mentioned here.
Ezekiel 20:13 recounts the same wilderness rebellion, rejection of statutes, and God's wrath, directly paralleling the testing and refusal to listen.
Joshua 14:9 records Moses' oath giving Caleb the land because he followed God fully, contrasting the ten times testing generation.
Hebrews 3:8 quotes Psalm 95, warning not to harden hearts as in the wilderness rebellion — directly referring to the testing mentioned here.
Joshua 5:4 explains that the generation of warriors died in the wilderness — the consequence of Israel testing God in Numbers 14.
Deuteronomy 1:34 recounts God's angry oath after Israel's rebellion, directly parallel to the testing in Numbers 14.
Acts 13:18 recalls God's patience with Israel in the wilderness — the same period where they tested Him ten times, highlighting His forbearance.